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BLOOD A Werekin Novel The Ark Trilogy: Book Two By: Jesse Daro Text copyright © 2014 Jesse Daro All Rights Reserved Second Edition Cover Photo by Josh Pesavento Used under Creative Commons license All Rights Reserved 2 If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to one another. - Mother Theresa In memory of my grandmother, Jessie Smith, the original Daro 3 Table of Contents Prologue 1: Arisen 2: Deadly Banishment 3: Love Birds 4: Mixed Messages 5: Bloodlines 6: Mea Culpa 7: Bleeding Hearts 8: What Lies Beneath 9: Back Story 10: The Ovid Experiment 11: Betrayal 12: Spaces Between 13: The Ark 14: Chapter and Verse 15: Star Crossed 16: War Dance 17: A Modest Proposal 18: Lost Souls 19: Before the Storm 20: Endgame 21: Last Words 22: Flashback 23: The Black Swan 24: Letting Go 25: Home Epilogue 4 werekin: n. 1. An ancient race of alien shapeshifters with the ability to transform into animals; once inhabited the lost continent of Lemuria, before it sank beneath the sea. 2. Genetically re-engineered alien race having both a human and an animal skin, able to shift between the two at will. Engineered by Dr. Elijah Bishop and Dr. Ursula LeRoi, founders of Chimera Enterprises, using alien genetic material discovered inside Mt. Hokulani. 5 Prologue Midnight. The witching hour. Clouds drifted across the white disc of the moon, swallowing the stars; the stately homes of the Castle Estates subdivision were shuttered for the night. Seth was sitting on the brick privacy fence around the backyard of his mother’s house at 706 Kings Lane, the woods he had just been running through at his back, the house where Lydia and Leigh slept dark and quiet before him. J.J. was crouched beside him, balanced on the toes of his black combat boots. The tips of his nails were sharpened into claws, digging into the mortar between the bricks; his round golden eyes, like Seth’s, were trained on the necromancer, who had begun to chant. Softly at first. Soft as the wind sighing in the spiny branches. Words that spoke of darkness, and rot. Shadows seeped out of the trees, flowed over the frosted grass, collecting along the base of the fence, their spindly fingers stretching toward the glyphs drawn atop the fresh grave. A match flared; the shadows momentarily retreated. Seth hissed. J.J. reached a hand out to steady him; in the flickering light, Seth saw the pale rosette-shaped spots blooming on his twin’s forearms, foils to the black spots on his own skin. The necromancer straightened to his full height. Almost eleven feet. Membranous black wings like a moth’s spread behind him, stirring the air. The candle flame began to dance. Red wax bled into the snow. The spell rose in power and volume, a single refrain that pulsed through Seth, matching the furious rhythm of his gonging heart: return; return; return… Agathon lifted a silver goblet crusted with diamonds and rubies. An acrid scent, burning sulfur mixed with the sweeter, hotter scent of fresh blood, stung Seth’s sensitive werekin nose. On a final, resounding note – return – Agathon tipped the goblet over, pouring a thick crimson stream onto the trembling mound of earth. The pressure dropped – Seth’s ears popped – and every window of every house on Kings Lane exploded outward. Seth hardly noticed. Soil was fountaining upward from the grave; something was struggling under the surface, wriggling desperately to free itself – 6 Seth and J.J. leapt, skinning as they did. Horror had curled into a fist inside of Seth. He imagined his friend suffocating beneath the hard-packed earth, where he had buried him less than a fortnight ago. The tawny jaguar scrabbled at the dirt with his claws, digging furiously. Beside him, his twin, the black jaguar, did the same. Lights were coming on next door at the Townsends’, across the street where Captain McLain had recently moved in, inside Seth’s own house. Over the shrieking of burglar alarms and the frightened voices calling to one another on the street, Seth heard a familiar, welcome sound. A bark. 7 Chapter One: Arisen “You didn’t tell me it would be so loud,” Seth complained. Perched on the edge of the bathroom sink, fluffy white towel draped around his bare shoulders, his twin, J.J., smirked. “Haven’t you ever heard the expression ‘enough noise to wake the dead’?” Captain Hook yipped. Kneeling beside the Jacuzzi, seventeen-year-old Seth Michael Sullivan sighed and plunged his hands into the hot suds, working grapefruit-scented shampoo into the little Dachshund’s reddishbrown fur. They were on their third scrubbing, and Captain Hook still had dirt caked around his muzzle. “Buddy, you are filthy,” Seth told him. “We may have to shave you.” Captain Hook whined. A door banged across the hall. J.J. tipped his blonde head back against Seth’s mirror. “Here we go,” he said. A moment later, the door to the bathroom was flung open, and their baby sister, Leigh (who was sixteen, actually, not really a baby), stormed in. The fury in her green eyes was as bright as her hot-pink robe. “J.J. Sullivan, if my dog is a zombie, I am holding you responsible.” “Leigh,” Seth protested. Seeing her, Captain Hook had made a valiant attempt at escape, sloshing water over the edge of the tub, onto Seth’s jeans. “Captain Hook is not a zombie, okay? Look at him. Does he look like a zombie?” “Braaaiiins,” J.J. drawled. Seth glared at him. So not helping. “Anyway, it wasn’t J.J.’s idea to bring him back – ” “Yes it was,” J.J. said. “Seth.” Leigh’s scowl softened as she turned from J.J. to him. “You don’t have to stand up for him. He already turned our cat into a warlock.” She threw J.J. another black look. “For the last time,” J.J. said, “Poe is a familiar, not a warlock. And she was never ‘your’ cat. She’s mine. I sent her here to watch over our brother.” Seth sighed. He had never really wondered how the ping pong ball felt in a game of table tennis, until recently. That was pretty 8 much how he felt every time he had been in the room with his siblings at the same time over the past week, since J.J. had come to live with them. If pitching a tent (literally) in the basement and dropping by for the occasional meal could be considered living with them. He pulled the stopper on the drain, scooped a semi-clean Captain Hook out of the tub, and deposited him into the towel Leigh held up. She cradled him, cooing like he was a baby. Captain Hook licked the underside of her chin. “Careful,” J.J. warned. “He’s getting a taste for later.” “J.J., you are such a – ” “Boys.” Lydia Steward, their mother, appeared in the doorway, cutting off Leigh’s description of J.J., which would probably have been quite colorful. Lydia’s usually easy-going smile had been ironed into a taut frown; she had tugged a red pea coat on over her satin pajamas when she had gone outside to speak with their terrified neighbors. Her auburn hair, like Leigh’s, was ruffled up on one side. “I’d like to see you both in the living room, now. Leigh,” she glanced disparagingly at the layer of grime in the bottom of Seth’s tub, “clean this up, and then go to bed.” “Why do I have to clean it up?” Leigh said. “I didn’t do anything. I didn’t even know anything was being done.” “Because you would have blabbed,” J.J. said. Leigh rounded on him. “I would not! I haven’t told anybody you’re werekin, have I?” “Adleigh, Jeremy, just…please.” Lydia sounded tired. Captain Hook was making little whine-yip noises at her. She reached out almost absently and patted his sleek head. “And be quick about it, boys. Will is waiting.” “Captain McLain is here?” Leigh’s hands flew to her messy hair. “Mom! You might have said!” “Leigh, for the last time, Will McLain is twenty-four years old – ” “And totally hot,” Leigh said. Lydia put her hands on her hips; Leigh rolled her eyes. “Relax, Mom. It’s not like I’m talking about marrying him.” “I would hope not,” Lydia snipped. Leigh flushed. For a moment Lydia looked like she might retract the words, but then she turned on her heel and walked out. 9 “Leave the mess, sis,” Seth said, gently. Leigh was blinking fast. Any allusion to her parents’ ongoing divorce, however oblique, was liable to provoke one of two reactions from her: uncontrollable fury at her father, or uncontrollable crying. Seth wasn’t up for either. “I’ll get it later. Go back to bed.” “I’ll do it,” Leigh said. “For you.” Pointed glance at J.J. She kissed the top of Captain Hook’s head. As soon as she put him down, he streaked into Seth’s room, hopping on his three legs and barking shrilly. Poe, their one-eyed calico kitten, observed him disdainfully from the window ledge. On his way downstairs, Seth paused to snatch a T-shirt out of the basket of clean laundry waiting to be folded beside his bed. Normally Seth wasn’t modest, but he was still adjusting to the ropy scar slashed across his midsection, hipbone to hipbone – evidence of the silver bullet that had all but eviscerated him a week ago, when Ursula LeRoi, founder of Chimera Enterprises, had shot him at point-blank range during her escape from Fort King. Besides, although Seth and J.J. were identical – same chiseled cheekbones, same wedge-shaped jaws, same big, round, golden eyes – J.J. carried a hard sheath of muscle on his slim frame that Seth, who had not been raised in the Scholae Bestiarii, lacked. Next to his brother, Seth felt like Diary of the Wimpy Twin. There were other differences between them, too, made all the more striking by their similarities. Seth’s hair was longer, dyed jet-black with bleached-blonde tips. J.J.’s hair was cut above his ears, a natural palette of gold, caramel, and butterscotch. Black rosette-shaped tattoos circled Seth’s right eye, brow to cheekbone. J.J. had a tattoo as well. His was a brand, on his right palm: 4331-ζ. A reminder that, for the first seventeen years of their lives, J.J. had been enslaved to Chimera Enterprises while Seth had lived free, in the Underground. In the entryway, wind was whistling through the shattered windows overlooking the Stewards’ snow-covered law. Through the fluttering curtains Seth glimpsed a police cruiser driving off down the street. They were so grounded. J.J., who had not bothered with a shirt, sprawled on the burgundy sofa in their teak-paneled living room, bare feet propped on the coffee table, arms slung over the sofa-back. Seth curled up 10 in a corner of the couch, feeling miserable. It wasn’t like their mother didn’t have enough stress without the neighbors thinking her delinquent sons had detonated a bomb in the backyard. Lydia sat on the arm of her soon-to-be-ex-husband’s recliner, nursing a cup of herbal tea. Leaning against the doorframe was a tall, handsome young man with the kind of suntan you only got in the desert. His dark hair was cropped as militarily short as J.J.’s, and, at the moment, sticking up like he too had been roused from sleep. He wore a Nike T-shirt and black sweats that were probably meant to be pajamas. Seeing the silver swan-shaped charm at his throat, Seth unconsciously touched the pewter jaguar charm around his own neck. Seth was not used to seeing Will McLain out of his camouflage fatigues. He looked younger than he did stomping around Fort King, issuing orders to the Marines in the black-ops division he commanded. Operation Swan Song, the top-secret military operation intended to wipe out the remnants of Chimera Enterprises and free the werekin from Dr. Ursula LeRoi’s tyranny, was largely McLain’s brainchild. Just a week ago, he had risked being court martialed (or killed) to help the werekin Resistance win the battle at Fort King and rescue their mythical savior, the Black Swan. “All right.” Lydia placed her mug on the hearth. “Whose idea was it?” “Mine,” J.J. said, automatically. “No it wasn’t,” Seth argued. “It was Agathon’s.” McLain sighed. Agathon was a Gen-0, one of Dr. Elijah Bishop’s first, and failed, attempts to genetically reengineer the werekin race from the alien DNA found inside Mt. Hokulani. That Agathon had been involved put Captain Hook’s resurrection squarely inside McLain’s sphere of responsibility. The Gen-0 resided at Fort King, the decommissioned military base outside of Fairfax, and Fort King was where they had agreed to stay. Gen-0 didn’t exactly blend in at the mall. Werekin had a human skin. Gen-0 didn’t. Giant mothmen and lizardpeople wandering the streets of Fairfax, Indiana, would no doubt cause a panic. Agathon was also a necromancer. Communicating with the dead for him was like texting a friend for anybody else. 11 Resurrecting Seth’s dog? Totally normal Saturday night for Agathon. “And where,” Lydia wanted to know, “did Agathon get the idea?” “From me,” said J.J., readily. “Seth said the dog died a couple of weeks ago. I’ve seen necromancers restore spirits when the body has been dead for six, seven months. Granted, there’s a certain ick factor in those cases, but the ground was so cold I doubted the corpse had putrefied – ” McLain cleared his throat. Lydia had gone white around the mouth. “Right.” J.J. scraped a fleck of mud off his cheek with a fingernail. The backs of his hands were webbed with lacelike scars – an old injury he had probably sustained in the Arena, where LeRoi had forced werekin to fight one another to the death, though Seth hadn’t worked up the nerve to ask him about them yet. “Anyway, it turned out fine. The dog isn’t a zombie. He’s the same dog you always knew and loved. No dimensional portals got ripped open – ” clearly Seth needed to read the fine print next time; he didn’t recall any mention of portal ripping when J.J. had presented him with the plan “ – so I don’t see what the problem is.” “The problem,” Lydia said, “is that your friend Agathon blew up half our block. The problem is that our backyard looks like a missile landed in it. The problem, Jeremy Jonathan, is that for the past hour, I have been convincing a police officer that both of my sons were asleep in their beds when this happened, and that neither of you has access to bomb-making materials, while Will has been convincing General Burke this incident will not in any way jeopardize the military’s ability to keep the existence of werekin secret from the rest of the world. Does any of that strike you as a ‘problem’?” “Maybe that last part, a little,” J.J. said. “Mom,” Seth intervened, “we’re sorry.” J.J. poked his shoulder, sending a jolt through him: I am not sorry. Twin telepathy. Another of their super werekin powers. Super even for werekin. Seth waved him off. “We’ll clean up the backyard, I promise. We didn’t mean to cause trouble.” 12 Seth honestly hadn’t. He had envisioned a quiet, intimate resurrection, Captain Hook yawning as he emerged from his grave, stretching as though waking from a nice long nap. He had planned to present him to Lydia and Leigh at breakfast with a pink bow around his neck. McLain pushed off the wall. “Maybe we can just agree no more use of magic without parental consent. And written authorization from General Burke, just to be safe.” Lydia seemed to think this was letting them off easy, but she also seemed too tired to press the point. “Straight to bed, boys,” she ordered, shooing them off the couch. “No skinning. And J.J., don’t forget, we’re going shopping for your school clothes tomorrow.” Seth did not need twin telepathy to interpret J.J.’s sigh. Oh joy. *** Seth had forgotten it was Valentine’s Day until he saw the redand-pink heart-shaped balloons around the mall entrance the next morning. Lydia drove them in the Escalade. Leigh came along (Leigh never missed an opportunity to shop), as did her best friend Whitney Townsend, younger sister of Seth’s boyfriend Marshall, who was currently grounded. Seth had not spoken to Marshall much of late, though he lived just across the driveway. Dr. Townsend was denying him phone calls and visitors. Seth hoped he was at least being allowed bread and water in his cell. Leigh claimed shotgun. Whitney scrunched into the back between Seth and J.J., wearing her usual sloppy boy’s cardigan and corduroy skirt, butterfly barrettes holding back her sleek chinlength bob. The moleskin notebook she scribbled poems in was sticking out of her canvas tote. “Marshall says hi,” she greeted Seth, after a shy hello to J.J. “Just ‘hi’?” Leigh twisted around in the seat. Unlike Whitney, Leigh never left the house in anything less than full couture. Today she had on a green velvet dress and a pair of thigh-high, spikeheeled boots their friend Cleo would have killed for. Perhaps literally. “Doesn’t he also say, ‘Oh Seth, I want your hot bod’?” “Only when we’re alone,” Seth said. J.J. grinned. 13 Being forced to listen to pop princess drivel on their way to the mall made Seth miss his motorcycle. His Yamaha privileges had been revoked by Lydia once she learned he had engaged in a teensy-weensy little car chase with a hunter on the highway. Like that had been Seth’s fault? Sadly, the Yamaha had been a gift from his weretiger guru Werner Regent, prior to Regent proving a psychopathic traitor to the werekin cause, and Seth’s minimum wage clerk job did not finance vehicle ownership. Thus, for the time being, he was stuck being chauffeured by his mom. At the food court, the ladies veered off toward Bath & Body. Seth led J.J. past Abercrombie, American Eagle, and Hot Topic to the coolest store in Fairfax’s mall: RE-SPIN – GENTLY USED CLOTHING, MUSIC AND BOOKS. “Smells Like Teen Spirit” was playing on the stereo. A small, skinny black boy with a mop of glossy hair hanging in his eyes was perched cross-legged on the glass-topped counter, beaky nose almost touching the screen of an über high tech PDA. His jeans were held up by a pair of striped suspenders. The teenage hippie at the register, Seth’s best friend and main wererabbit Emery Little, looked up from his copy of Rolling Stone, oversize ears twitching, as the brothers strolled in. “Hey, Seth. Hey, J.J.” Emery clasped Seth’s arm below the elbow – a gladiator handshake. “Cool jacket, by the way.” “You like?” Seth catwalk-turned in front of the used-CD bins, modeling his new blue-and-gold Fairfax High Knights letterman’s jacket. His number, #4, was stitched on the back. Seth played point guard. Lydia had ordered the jacket for him on the sly, before he had raised the dead and wrecked the backyard and half their subdivision. He turned to the other boy. “How’s it goin’, Baby Bird?” Dre Alfaro jerked his chin in greeting without taking his eyes off the PDA. Knowing Dre, he was probably hacking into the Air Force Space Command. Though just sixteen – too young to officially join the Resistance – he was such a tech-wizard McLain secretly had him on payroll. Seth explained that they were there to outfit J.J. in something besides camouflage. “He’s starting school tomorrow,” he added. “Are you excited?” Emery asked. “Super excited,” said J.J. 14 Re-Spin sold secondhand clothes of the vintage variety, mostly rocker tees and gamer getups. In the end, J.J. selected two pairs of faded jeans and a handful of plain black T-shirts exactly like the one he was wearing. To appease their mother, who refused to believe they, like all werekin, didn’t feel the cold, he also picked out a brown leather jacket with a worn patch on the elbow. Having grown up in a Chimera laboratory, J.J. hadn’t been exposed to much American pop culture. Emery and Seth loaded him up with albums from Re-Spin’s used CD shelves, running the gamut from folk to heavy metal. “Figure out what you like and you can trade the rest back in,” Emery told him kindly, ringing them up with Seth’s employee discount. J.J. nodded. He was thumbing through a paperback copy of Lord of the Flies he had taken off the bookshelves in the back. “Where are you taking Whitney tonight?” Seth asked. Emery’s nose reddened to match his strawberry-blonde ponytail. “The movies. I got her a Valentine’s Day present, too. Do you think it’s too soon?” “She’ll love it,” Seth predicted. Whitney and Emery were his It couple. Seth and J.J. left soon after, with promises to see Emery and Dre at school the next day. Like most of the werekin in Fairfax, the Littles and Alfaros lived in Haven Heights, a rundown housing district along the river. Fairfax High, the city’s largest public high school, was fed by both Haven and the Stewards’ posh subdivision, Castle Estates, making for a not-entirely-comfortable mix that went beyond the haves and the have-nots – try the human and the alien. Seth had somehow managed to successfully straddle both worlds, but he didn’t think J.J. would. Werecats were the fiercest of the warrior breeds. Emery had once told Seth the aura of magic around him was the strongest he had ever seen. Humans sensed that magic, even if they didn’t know what it meant. It made them nervous. And J.J. was a much more potent animal, so to speak, than Seth was. Across the street in the Barnes and Noble café, the twins ordered two blueberry muffins apiece. Seth had coffee, with lots of milk and extra sugar. J.J. had chai tea. They cornered a table in the back, facing the door. (J.J. insisted on a clear view of the room.) 15 The cinnamon scent of his tea dredged up unwelcome memories for Seth, who slowly peeled the paper off his muffin. “Regent used to drink tea like that,” he said. “Used to?” J.J. considered him slantwise, his gaze roving the weekend shoppers browsing the shelves outside the café. “He’s not dead, you know.” “I wish he was,” Seth mumbled. He didn’t really mean it like it sounded, though. He wished Regent had fallen in battle, fighting by his side against Chimera. Then Seth wouldn’t have felt guilty for missing him. “Ah.” J.J.’s golden eyes suddenly brightened. “There she is.” “She” was a tall, muscular girl with maple-brown hair razorcut to the scalp and eyes of such pale blue they looked purple in the fluorescent light. “She” was Cleo, J.J.’s partner in the Scholae Bestiarii, a hunter who had turned on Chimera to protect the werekin she had been trained to kill. Cleo’s spike-heeled boots clicked on the tile as she strode toward them in skintight jeans and a black T-shirt like J.J.’s. J.J. reached around, snagging a chair from the table next to theirs, and pulled it over for her. “Did you telepathically invite her?” Seth asked. “Yes,” J.J. said. “Oh, he did not.” Looking sourly at J.J., Cleo plunked down on her chair. “Being telepathic doesn’t give him access to everyone’s mind, sweetheart, just yours, because of the twin connection. Speaking to anyone else requires a complicated spell, and really only works in dreams.” Seth raised an eyebrow at J.J., who shrugged. “I called her last night. Told her to meet us here at ten-thirty.” Cleo ordered a muffin, and the boys filled her in on Captain Hook’s resurrection. Then she and J.J. launched into giving Seth the skinny on Operation Swan Song’s efforts to bring down what remained of Chimera Enterprises. “Not much to tell,” J.J. said. “Chimera had dozens of topsecret laboratories all over the country as part of Project Ark. McLain’s men have raided the ones we knew about, freed the collared werekin held there, and taken the hunters they could catch into custody. So far we haven’t found LeRoi. General Burke believes she kept other facilities that weren’t on the books, where 16 she ran all kinds of unauthorized experiments. Dre is working on cracking the encryption on her PDA, and we’re hoping that will tell us where the other facilities are. LeRoi will have at least some collared werekin there, and as long as she has them, she can breed more.” “So what is the Resistance doing to help?” Seth wanted to know. Cleo glanced at J.J. and said, “Nothing, yet. The Commanders haven’t decided on a course of action.” “But you’ve been meeting all week!” Seth protested. “For hours.” As of last week, the werekin Resistance had established its command at Fort King, where the Ark was housed. For his part, Seth was staying out of werekin politics. He was focused on passing eleventh grade and leading the Fairfax High Knights to victory against the Sacred Heart Warriors at sectionals. But J.J. and Cleo, like Lydia, spent most of their time at Fort King. “The problem,” Cleo explained, as Seth drug her muffin over to finish it off, “is that we’ve got two factions. If it was up to Captain McLain and Ben Schofield, we’d hunt down what’s left of Chimera on whatever intel we have and finish them off. But on the other side we’ve got Derek Childers saying McLain can’t be trusted. He’s insisting we forget about Chimera, locate the Black Swan, and raise Lemuria so the werekin can return to their homeland. The whole process is stalled while they go round and round.” “Typical Resistance b.s.,” J.J. said. His tone was sour. J.J. had no patience for the Resistance’s cautious guerilla tactics. J.J. was one-hundred-percent-in-your-face soldier. Seth was worried about how he would handle being razzed by idiot jocks like Cam Foss, Seth’s least-favorite person at Fairfax High. He leaned back in his chair. “Derek was the werewolf, right? The tall guy with the silver burn scars on his face?” “Wanted to run away rather than fight?” J.J. threw in. Cleo gave him a look. “Derek thinks the Black Swan didn’t really escape during the battle. He claims McLain stashed her somewhere and is using us, the Resistance, to bring all of the werekin in the Underground out of hiding so the military can either collar them or exterminate them, to be sure they aren’t a threat to humanity.” 17 Seth was indignant. “How could anyone believe that about McLain? His family helped found the Underground. And if it wasn’t for him, the Black Swan would still be in LeRoi’s clutches!” “I like McLain, too, sweetheart, but a lot of werekin in the Resistance were raised in captivity, and before Project Ark was decertified, Burke’s men were the ones who trained us in the Scholae Bestiarii. They weren’t all as humane as Captain McLain.” Cleo glanced at J.J., who, Seth noticed, seemed to have developed a fascination with his fingernails. “General Burke isn’t what you’d call a big cuddly teddy bear himself. Werekin are quick to believe the worst about McLain because of that. And he can’t prove Derek wrong, since nobody knows where the Black Swan is.” “Well,” J.J. said, “almost nobody.” Seth squirmed. A feeling like worms wriggling in his belly had started up. “Agathon didn’t tell the Commanders about Marshall, did he? They don’t know he’s the one who helped the Black Swan escape, do they?” “No,” J.J. said. “I promised you we wouldn’t tell them, didn’t I?” Exacting that promise from his twin had not been easy. As the smoke had cleared from the battle, the Resistance had clamored for the return of the Black Swan, prophesied in ancient Lemurian texts to raise the werekin motherland from the seas, thereby restoring their connection to the Totems. But the Black Swan was in hiding. She believed someone inside the Resistance had betrayed her to Chimera. With LeRoi on the loose, until the traitor’s identity was discovered, she was safer Underground. Marshall Townsend had whisked her away from Fairfax during the battle, vanishing for a day (hence the grounding) and returning alone. No one, not even Seth, knew where he had taken her. Only a handful of people knew Marshall had been involved in her disappearance at all: Seth, J.J., Emery, Lydia, Agathon, and Cleo. That was how Seth wanted it to stay. If Chimera did have a spy inside the Resistance, anything they knew, LeRoi would know, and LeRoi would stop at nothing to force Marshall to give up the location of the Black Swan. Raising Lemuria, securing the power of the Totems, had been her obsession since she and Bishop discovered Mt. Hokulani well over fifty years ago. 18 “What does Ben say?” Seth asked, to change the subject. “He’s focusing on signing werekin up with the Resistance.” Cleo swatted J.J.’s hand when he tried to steal part of Seth’s stolen muffin. J.J. complained. Seth grinned. “He says war with LeRoi is inevitable. Even Elijah Bishop knew that. More werekin are arriving at Fort King from the Underground every day. And we’ve got the Gen-0s. If the Commanders could get their acts together, we could do some serious damage to Chimera with this much firepower.” “I wouldn’t hold my breath,” J.J. said, and made as if to push back from the table – only to stop, his whole body going still in a way that warned Seth something was amiss. “What?” he and Cleo said, together. Turning, Seth saw what. Or, rather, who. A boy was making his way toward their table. Dirty blonde hair scraped the collar of his letterman’s jacket, just long enough to be rebellious. His worn-soft Levis were set low on his hips, emphasizing his slenderness. He was almost pretty, especially when he smiled, warmly, and said, with a slight Texas drawl, “It’s Seth, isn’t it?” “Uh, yeah,” Seth said, looking sideways at J.J. Oblivious to J.J.’s ice-cold stare, Connor Burke pulled a chair over to their table and sat down on it backwards. “I didn’t get a chance to congratulate you after the game the other night. That was some jump shot you pulled off there at the end.” Connor finally looked at J.J., one fair eyebrow lifting. “This – must be your brother?” “Cousin,” Seth lied, quickly. Enrolling J.J. at Fairfax High had been complicated by the fact that everyone believed Seth’s twin had died as an infant – drowned in the bathtub, after which Thomas Sullivan had absconded with Seth, blaming his wife for her carelessness. J.J. even had a tombstone in the local cemetery. Thus he would be posing as Seth and Leigh’s cousin, claiming to have grown up attending boarding school in Connecticut, where Thomas Sullivan’s non-existent brother lived. “J.J., this is Connor Burke. He plays for our rivals, Sacred Heart.” “How you doin’,” Connor said. J.J. just nodded. He had yet to relax his fighter’s stance. Connor Burke was much more deeply connected to them all than just being the all-star captain of the Sacred Heart Warriors – he was the only son of General David 19 Burke, commander of Operation Swan Song. But Connor knew nothing about the true nature of his father’s work. Seth had asked McLain about him, and McLain had said Burke didn’t want his son involved with Chimera Enterprises in any way. It was too dangerous. Besides, Operation Swan Song was classified above top-secret. Officially, werekin did not exist. When Seth had first met Connor a few weeks ago, he had been taken by his easy charm. Said charm was on full display now as he turned his green-swirled hazel eyes onto Cleo. “Another cousin?” he asked, lightly. Maybe a little too lightly. J.J. sat up straighter. “This is Cleo,” Seth said. “Just a friend.” “You don’t go to Fairfax High,” Connor said – a statement, not a question. “I graduated,” Cleo said, shortly. She glanced at J.J. If Seth hadn’t known better, he would have sworn that color in her cheeks was a blush. “Really?” Connor sounded skeptical. “You don’t look old enough to be in college.” “Who said anything about college?” Seth wasn’t sure Cleo meant it to come out so coyly. She looked down at the table, definitely blushing now. Connor broke into one of his easy smiles. “Lemme guess. Military.” “What – what makes you say that?” Cleo stammered. “Just the way you carry yourself,” Connor said. “I’m an army brat. You learn to spot the training.” This was hitting too close to the mark for comfort. Cleo looked at Seth for help. “I hear we’ll be meeting again for sectionals,” he said. “Huh? Oh. Yeah.” Connor turned to Seth, seeming reluctant to look away from Cleo. “Brackets should be announced this week. I’m not looking forward to getting matched up against Montrose again. They’ve got this new captain, and from what I hear, he’s pretty good. I hope you’re not benched this time,” he added. “Wouldn’t it be better for you if I was?” Connor’s eyes shifted to a deeper green when he laughed. “Easier, maybe,” he conceded. “But I don’t see the fun in winning if you aren’t playing against the best.” It was the kind of thing Marshall would have said, and meant, as sincerely as Connor obviously did. Seth had never met General 20 Burke face to face, but he had encountered him in a spirit-walk Cleo had sent him on. Somehow he didn’t think Connor had inherited his laidback golden boy grooviness from his father any more than he had his pretty face. David Burke could have been carved from stone in every sense of the word. “Well, I should be – ” Connor started, just as Cleo said, abruptly, “I need to get – ” They stopped, looked at one another, and laughed. “I’ll walk you out, then,” Connor offered. Cleo shrugged and stood up, too quickly for Connor to pull her chair out for her, which Seth could tell he had been about to do. “See ya, sweetheart,” she said to Seth, and nodded, brusquely, to J.J. They walked out together, Connor’s hands jammed in the pockets of his red-and-black jacket, Cleo tilting her head back to look up at him as he shouldered the door open for them both. As it closed behind them, J.J.’s chair scraped back from the table. His golden eyes were flat as brass coins. “Come on,” he said. “We’re late to meet Lydia.” 21 Chapter Two: Deadly Banishment MoJo’s was the most popular restaurant in Fairfax, a microbrewery with a London pub-style atmosphere and the most delicious deep-dish veggie pizza on the planet. By the time Seth and J.J. arrived, Leigh and Whitney had secured a booth in the back, against one of the exposed-brick walls. The brothers weaved through the packed weekend crowd toward them. “Look what Whitney bought Emery,” Leigh squealed as they sat down. She held up a white T-shirt emblazoned with a black Playboy Bunny logo. “How adorable,” said Seth. J.J. had vanished behind his menu. “What’s the occasion?” Leigh thumped him on the head with her menu. “Valentine’s Day, doofus. Didn’t you get anything for Marshall?” “Leigh,” Lydia said, warningly. “Oops.” Leigh bit her lip. “Sorry, Seth.” Seth smiled to show her it was all right, but he hoped she wouldn’t make a slip like that at school, especially in earshot of Cam Foss. Seth’s love affair with the boy next door wasn’t exactly front page news in Fairfax. Just another of Seth’s many secrets, until Marshall got comfortable with coming out to his parents. Which Seth feared might be the Twelfth of Never, but he was trying to be patient. “Should I get something for him?” he wondered. “Maybe a file baked into a pie, so he can pick the lock on his cell?” Whitney grinned. “I don’t think he’s expecting anything. However,” she pointed at Seth with a slice of green pepper, “I will pass along the insider info that Mom is still in Vegas for her girls’ weekend, and Dad is pulling a double shift at Fairfax Memorial tonight, if you wanted to drop by.” Lydia put her hands over her ears. “I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that, so I can’t forbid you to go.” Seth’s mom was the coolest. SuperMom Goddess. He blew her a kiss across the booth. “J.J., did you want to get something for Cleo?” he asked. J.J. peered at him over the menu he was still pretending to read. “Why would I do that?” He sounded genuinely bewildered. 22 “Uh, maybe because she’s in love with you?” Leigh said – then yelped and rubbed her shin, glowering at Seth. “Ow! Hey! What are you kicking me for?” “Sis,” Seth muttered, “shut-up.” J.J. didn’t say anything, just nibbled on a crust, his expression guarded – a curtain drawn across his thoughts, shutting out even Seth. *** “I am not going in there,” Leigh declared, folding her arms obstinately across her chest. Lydia sighed. “Nobody is asking you to, Leigh.” The Escalade was idling along the curb in front of the twostory brick building that had been a warehouse until Gavin Steward, Jack Steward’s father, had converted it to a law firm decades ago. After lunch, Lydia had announced she had one more errand to run before they headed home, and Leigh had started to fume the minute they had exited the expressway for downtown. Across the street was Sacred Heart, which reminded Seth of a cathedral (as it used to be) with its domed roof and white spires. Seth sat forward in the seat. He had never been to his step-father’s office. THE STEWARD & REGENT LAW FIRM was painted on the firm’s window in delicate gilt letters, though really, it was just Steward now. A campaign poster for Jonathan Steward, candidate for the United States Senate, beamed at them from the front door. Seth didn’t know if Jack still planned to run for office now that Chimera, the company that had orchestrated his senatorial bid, had fallen from its seat at the highest echelons of governmental power. He had not spoken to Jack since he had nearly died saving Seth from Regent before the battle. “All of you wait here,” Lydia said. “I’ll only be a sec.” Seth popped open his door. “I’ll go.” “Seth – ” “It’s fine, Mom.” Sticking his head back in the car, Seth said, “Be right back.” Lydia looked like she wanted to argue, but Seth had already hightailed it up the sidewalk. 23 The firm’s front door was unlocked. Seth opened it cautiously, peering around an immaculate lobby dominated by a cherrystained receptionist desk. Leather sofas fronted a stone hearth off to one side; behind him, bay windows spilled winter light onto the parquet floor. Brushed brick walls climbed up two stories to a wraparound walkway edged by an iron railing. Overhead, teardrop lights ensconced in opaque glass dripped from the wooden rafters. The space was sunnier, more open, than Seth had expected. He found Jack’s office down a long hallway behind the receptionist’s desk. No one answered his knocks, and Seth was considering picking the lock – a snap for him – when his acute werekin hearing picked up rustling on the upper floor. Turning, he climbed the open staircase and followed a red-carpeted hallway past conference rooms and a small law library to the building’s east side, which faced the sparkling Ohio River. A door at the end was ajar. “Knock knock,” Seth said. “It’s open,” someone called. Seth pushed the door inward. Jack Steward was setting down a paint roller, wiping his spackled hands on his jeans. Seth had never seen his step-father in flannel and sneakers before – usually it was a suit and tie, at most a Georgetown sweatshirt on the weekends. Blue paint dotted his trim mustache and goatee. His right arm was still in a sling. Regent’s claws had all but severed it. Healing potion and Marshall’s emergency medical training were all that had saved Jack from being an amputee. When he saw Seth, he took a step forward. “Seth? Is everything all right?” His gray eyes slid over Seth’s shoulder. Looking for Lydia, probably. Or a pack of bloodthirsty werekin. Take your pick which would have been more terrifying. “I came for J.J.’s transcripts,” Seth said. “Of course.” Jack looked relieved, and maybe something else, something Seth couldn’t define. “They’re in my office,” he said. The plastic drop cloth crinkled underfoot as he hurried by, careful not to linger in swiping range of Seth’s claws. Seth hesitated, surveying the room. It looked like the entryway to a loftstyle apartment. A single pane of glass comprised the east wall, overlooking the river; beyond that was the Kentucky shore, densely foliaged with trees. Through an archway, he could see a 24 large living room with a kitchen and hallway branching off. The floors were hardwood, the high ceilings supported by white columns. The place didn’t look lived-in yet. No furniture. Bare light bulbs. Primer-smeared walls, prepared for the paint Jack had been applying. “Renovating?” Seth asked, as he light-footed after Jack down the stairs. “My father had the apartment put in when he purchased the building. He used to stay here when he worked late. It’s been used for storage since he died.” That had been almost twenty years ago, during Jack’s last year of law school, Seth recalled. Afterward, Jack and his friends Thomas Sullivan and Werner Regent had hung out a shingle together, in Gavin Steward’s former offices. Gavin Steward had been an agent of Chimera as well. Jack unlocked the door to his office, which was just as sunny (and swanky) as the lobby. Seth ghosted his fingers across the spines of the legal volumes packed onto the bookshelves while Jack fished a manila envelope from his filing cabinet. “Is this where you’re going to live now?” he asked. “As soon as the paint dries.” Jack closed the drawer with his good shoulder and offered the envelope to Seth. “Tell Lydia there’s a driver’s license in there as well.” Seth tucked the envelope inside his jacket. The transcripts Jack had forged would lend credence to the tale of J.J.’s Connecticut boarding school past. Seth’s own bogus transcripts from being “homeschooled” in Philly (as in, many afternoons in the public library) were already on file at Fairfax High. It helped that the principal, Ingrid McLain, Captain McLain’s aunt, was one of the few humans with the ability to recognize werekin auras, and had helped found the Underground years ago. “Well,” Seth said, “thanks, Mr. Steward.” “Seth.” Jack sighed. “You are so damn polite.” Seth blinked. “Sorry,” he said. “I’ll work on being ruder.” A wry smile twisted Jack’s mouth. “I just meant you shouldn’t thank me.” He ran a hand through his dark hair. There were more streaks of gray in it than Seth remembered. “Don’t thank me, is what I mean.” 25 Outside, a horn honked. Seth backed toward the door; Jack took a step after him. “You should come back sometime,” he said. “There are things we should talk about.” Like why you handed my dad and J.J. over to Chimera, you backstabbing prick? How was that for polite? “We’ll see,” Seth said. His tone was cool. Jack nodded. In the doorway, Seth glanced back to see his step-father climbing the stairs, shoulders slumped as though weighted down by the pressure of guilt. *** “Are you going over to Cleo’s?” Seth asked, hopping up on Lydia’s sewing table. “Later.” J.J. fell back on his cot, arching his spine as he stretched. It was only late afternoon, but being, like all cats, nocturnal, J.J. was still adjusting to being awake all day, asleep all night. Seth had suffered the same REM disturbance during his first weeks in Fairfax. The twins were in the basement, a cool, damp place that reminded Seth a little of a cave, if caves had smelled like fabric softener. It was home to the washer and dryer, Lydia’s sewing machine, and metal shelves holding junk originally bound for Goodwill, now commandeered by Leigh for a garage sale to support The Student Vegan Society, of which she was president. “It’s not true, you know,” J.J. said. Seth looked up from the ball of string he had been teasing Poe with. “What isn’t?” “What Leigh said. About Cleo being in love with me. It’s not true.” Beg to differ, brother dear, Seth thought. He had once been kiss-attacked by Cleo while she was thinking of his twin. “Cleo and I grew up together, at LeRoi’s estate in Connecticut. She’s a Gen-7, too.” J.J.’s golden eyes were very pale in the basement’s dim light. All werekin had markings that hinted at their animal skin. With Seth and J.J. it was their eyes, their wedge-shaped chins; with Dre, his birdlike smallness and pinched beak of a nose; with his brother Angelo, his size, bigger than a bull, and velvet-black skin; with Emery, his big ears and pink nose. Cleo wasn’t werekin, but like 26 all hunters, she wasn’t entirely human, either. Hunters were the offspring of werekin parents for whom the werekin gene, for reasons Chimera’s scientists could not control, skipped. Hunters were not shapeshifters, but genetically, they were superior to humans, possessed of the same preternatural speed, strength, and agility as werekin. Elijah Bishop had learned more about werekin genetics than anyone else before being executed for helping the Gen-1 werekin escape captivity. Seth had read the doctor’s journal. In it, Bishop had hypothesized that werekin were chosen by their Totems; their skin had much more to do with magic than science. Not that that had stopped Chimera from breeding them in captivity, hoping the magic would pass from parent to child. When it didn’t, that child was trained up to be a hunter. Seth thought of Cleo’s silvery eyes and muscular build. “Do you know what breeds her parents were?” he asked. “No. She would have been taken from them when she was a baby, to be trained in the Scholae Bestiarii. Can’t have hunters forming attachment to their werekin sires.” J.J.’s lashes lowered, showing Seth only a sliver of gold. “I’m surprised she didn’t tell you about it.” “Cleo isn’t big on heart-to-hearts,” Seth said. “Yeah, but she’s…different, with you.” There was an edge to J.J.’s voice Seth didn’t like. “Different than what?” “Different than with me,” J.J. said. He was tracing the scars on the back of his hand. Seth was dying to know how he had gotten them, but before he could think of a tactful way to broach the topic, J.J. said, “Are we training later?” He sounded eager. J.J. had agreed to pick up Seth’s martial arts lessons where Regent had left off. Stoked as Seth was to learn to use his new samurai sword, he had other plans for the evening. “Not tonight,” he said, sliding off the table. “Tonight, I have a date.” “Right.” J.J. patted his chest; Poe hopped onto the cot and curled up there, purring. “Tell Doc I said hi.” Upstairs, Seth found the door across from his bedroom open. Madonna was blaring on Leigh’s stereo. Her entire closet seemed to have exploded onto her polka dot bedspread. Captain Hook was 27 lying on a Burberry skirt, munching a rawhide bone. “How’s the rebirth going?” Seth asked him. Captain Hook wagged his stubby tail. Leigh sauntered out of the bathroom, wearing a slinky applered tank top and painted-on black jeans. Seth’s eyes narrowed. She wasn’t planning on leaving the house dressed like that, was she? “Seth, help me out,” she said, holding up two necklaces – a Gothic cross on a black ribbon and a silver heart choker. “Which do you like better?” “Oh, I see. Just because I’m gay, now I’m a fashion expert?” Leigh raised her eyebrows at his jeans and T-shirt. “Clearly not,” she said. “I’m asking because you know Bryce. Which do you think he’ll like?” Seth stopped petting the dog. “Bryce as in Bryce Heilsdale?” “Do we know another Bryce?” said Leigh, airily, as she fastened the choker. “We’re doubling with Emery and Whitney tonight.” “When did this happen?” Last Seth had heard, Leigh was nursing a broken heart over Marshall. His big brother scowl was noted with an exaggerated eye roll in the mirror. “It’s one date, Seth. For Valentine’s Day. Anyway, you like Bryce, remember?” Seth had liked Bryce. Until about two minutes ago. Now he might bite his broken leg off in Bio on Monday. “What about McLain?” Leigh fluffed her auburn curls. “You mean Captain McLain?” “Do we know another McLain?” “Seth, Will McLain is twenty-four years old,” Leigh quipped, in such a perfect imitation of their mother Seth couldn’t help laughing. “That’ll be Whitney,” Leigh said, as her cell phone chirped. She grabbed her purse off the closet-door. “Have fun with Marshall!” she sang out. Seth smiled. Oh, he intended to. *** Bryce Heilsdale tripped over his crutches trying to get ahead of Leigh to open the door to Archie’s Diner. It was difficult to walk and ogle at the same time, Whitney was sure, especially with your 28 leg in a cast, but still. God love her supermodel best friend, Leigh had no sense of practicality when it came to fashion. It was barely ten degrees outside. She was going to freeze in that tiny little tank top. Whitney, on the other hand, was toasty warm in her long red velvet skirt and chocolate sweater, her feet tucked into rubber snow boots that squeaked on the diner’s checkered floor. Emery had claimed the booth near the jukebox, underneath the picture of Elvis in his blue suede shoes. Archie’s was Whitney’s favorite hang-out. The theme was 1950s Americana: The old Wurlitzer played “Can’t Buy Me Love” every third song, and servers in poodle skirts skated out from behind a chrome counter to serve juicy garden burgers and handdipped milkshakes. Leigh had pitched a fit about eating somewhere so out of the way – the diner was right off the Interstate, near the new movie theater. Nobody, she said, would be there. By nobody, she meant the in-crowd of jocks and cheerleaders, of which Leigh and Whitney were neither, though their brothers were. The whole point of getting dressed up, Leigh had explained on the drive, was to be seen. A server came by to take their orders, seeming a bit harried. The diner was hopping, the booths filled with couples. Bryce wedged his cast under the table to keep from tripping servers as they skated past. “This place is cool,” he said, sleepy green eyes taking in the room. “I’ve never been here before.” “Best garden burgers in town,” Emery said. He and Bryce didn’t know one another well; as a rule, the Haven kids and the Castle kids did not mingle, and Bryce was definitely the latter. His dad owned the largest shipping company in the state. Bryce was also human, and thus put-off by what Seth called “the werekin vibe,” but it just so happened he and Emery were both extremely laidback. They even looked a little alike, both tall and thin, strongfeatured, though Bryce was dark where Emery was fair. So far, they were getting along fine. Emery laid his arm across the back of the booth, leaning in to Whitney while Leigh started asking Bryce who he thought would make prom court – a not-so-subtle hint that she was still looking for a date. “Did you like your present?” Emery asked, softly. 29 Whitney tugged the gift, a secondhand collection of Shakespeare’s sonnets, from her canvas tote. The worn cover was blue cloth embroidered with silver stars. The pages were thick, creamy parchment. “I love it,” she said. “Did you really like yours?” “I love it,” Emery said. In fact, he was wearing his gift. He had changed into the Playboy T-shirt in the Townsends’ bathroom before they had left for Archie’s. Marshall had been in the kitchen, humming “The Wedding March.” Seth, Whitney thought, was rubbing off on him. Their food arrived. Leigh immediately folded one of Bryce’s fries into her mouth. “You could have at least bought her something new, Little,” she said. “Leigh!” Bryce was aghast. “What?” Leigh snagged another fry. She had ordered a salad and a Diet Coke, but Leigh had a weakness for fries. She had once told Whitney her version of heaven was where you could eat all the grease, salt, and chocolate you wanted and never gain an ounce. “I’m just saying. How hard is it to buy a new book?” “This one is special.” Emery opened the book and ran his thumb along the notes penciled into the margins. “Whoever owned it before jotted down all these thoughts about the poems. I found it in with my dad’s stuff. I thought you might like to read them.” He sat back, twirling his St. Francis medal and looking hopefully at Whitney. Emery had eyes of very light green shaded by coppery lashes. Sometimes, like now, they darkened to marblegray, like smoke seen through glass. Whitney always thought Emery was handsome. But when he was glamoured, like he was tonight, the whorls of color that surrounded him, generated by the magic in his blood, were dampened, and Whitney could see him. “It’s perfect,” she said, softly. Emery blushed. “Okay, I admit, you pulled it out there, Little. That’s pretty neat.” Leigh took a thoughtful sip through her straw. “Unless the guy wrote a bunch of creepy stuff about ex-girlfriends or whatever. It’s not anything creepy, is it, Whitney?” “Leigh, I’m sure – ” The bell above the door jangled. Whitney cut off, startled. “It’s Captain McLain,” she said, and promptly blushed. First of all, it 30 wasn’t as if Will McLain didn’t eat and sleep, like any regular person. Secondly, Bryce, like most of the world, had no idea who Will McLain was, why he was in Fairfax, or that werekin even existed. Whitney hadn’t known until a week ago, when she had been tranqed by one of Chimera’s hunters in her own front yard. Bryce turned, along with Leigh, as McLain strode up to the chrome counter and sank onto a stool. He wasn’t alone; Dre Alfaro was tripping along behind him. Literally: Dre’s eyes were fastened on a handheld computer, and he stumbled into the jukebox before righting himself and sitting down beside the captain. Aside from his combat boots, McLain wasn’t in uniform. He was in faded jeans and a black hoodie. Still there was something undeniably soldier-like about him. Two servers competed to be the first to take his order. A bleached-blonde surfer girl won the race, and her friend went to pout behind the cash register, sneaking looks at the dark-haired soldier from under her lashes. “Who is he?” Bryce asked, turning back around. “Our neighbor,” answered Leigh, glossing over McLain’s more mystical connection to the Stewards. “He’s Principal McLain’s nephew.” “No way.” Bryce looked astounded. “You mean Will McLain?” Emery did one of his funny little hops. “How do you know that name?” he squeaked. “Dude, are you serious?” said Bryce. “Will McLain is a legend. He played center for the Knights when he was in high school. Led them to three state championships. He was like the original Marshall Townsend.” “Oh no, my friend,” Whitney said. “There is only one Marshall Townsend.” Bryce grinned. Leigh stood up. “Come on, Whitney. Let’s go say hi.” “Leigh, no.” Whitney could feel her face glowing. She was no good at talking to strangers, and she didn’t know Will McLain at all, other than to say hi on the sidewalk. Although, she would have liked to know the captain. From what Emery had said, McLain, like her, could see the auras that haloed werekin. She was curious to know what the magic looked like to someone else. “We shouldn’t bug him.” “We won’t bug him. It would be rude not to say hi.” 31 Leigh got out of the booth, tapping her kitten heels impatiently. Whitney, with an apologetic shrug at Emery, crawled out after her. Arguing with Leigh once she had made up her mind was pointless. You might as well have gone outside and screamed at the storm. The girls crossed the diner, Leigh in the lead. The stool on McLain’s right was empty. Leigh plopped down on it. Whitney hovered behind her, curling her hands inside her long sleeves. McLain looked up, confusion, then surprise, registering in his coffee-colored eyes. He quickly tucked something under his laminated menu. It looked like a photograph. “Hey, Leigh,” he said. “Hello, Whitney. What are you girls doing here?” At Leigh’s name, Dre’s chin jerked up. He had drawn his knees up onto his stool. With affection, Whitney saw that his tennis shoes had a hole in the toe. She smiled at him. “We’re with our boyfriends.” Leigh pointed at Emery and Bryce – whose status, Whitney noted, had just been upped from first date to going steady. “What about you?” “Just grabbing a bite before Dre and I head off to work.” Veiled reference to a top-secret Resistance meeting, Whitney assumed. She knew from Emery that the meetings weren’t producing many results. McLain looked tired, and Whitney felt a pang of sisterly concern for him. If he was like Marshall, he would hold himself to impossibly high standards for success. He probably considered Operation Swan Song’s setbacks his own personal failing. “I understand you’re all classmates?” Dre nodded eagerly, upsetting the newsboy cap perched on his glossy hair. Dre had his own sense of style, attested by the striped suspenders paired with his Star Trek T-shirt. Though they had gone to school together for two years – they were even in the same study hall – Leigh barely seemed to know he was alive. She leaned her elbows on the counter, eyes only for McLain. Her tank top was very low-cut. McLain kept his gaze on her face. “Was that a picture of your girlfriend you were looking at?” she asked, slyly. “Oh.” McLain hesitated just long enough to tell Whitney this was not something he really wanted to share before he slid the picture out from under the menu. “No. My sister.” The girl in the photo was lovely – young, perhaps twelve, with lots of glossy black hair and creamy-white skin. The photo had 32 been snapped in the desert. McLain was in it, too, his arms around his little sister, her dark head tucked sweetly under his chin. They were both laughing. For just a second, before he slipped the photo back into his wallet, Whitney felt a tickle in her brain, like she had just walked out of a dark theater into bright sunlight and her eyes were trying to adjust. “Where is she now?” Leigh asked, curiously. “With friends,” McLain said. “I’m hoping we’ll be back together soon.” Absence from those we love is self from self – a deadly banishment. McLain and Leigh were both staring at her, and Whitney realized she had spoken aloud. “Shakespeare,” she said, quickly. “I’ve got him on the brain, I guess. Emery gave me this book of sonnets…” McLain’s smile crinkled the tanned skin around his eyes. “Well, nobody gets it right quite like the Bard, I always say.” There was a measure of amusement in his tone. Whitney didn’t think he was laughing at her, though. She even thought she might have somehow said just what he needed to hear. She smiled shyly back at him, and was about to steer Leigh back to their booth when Dre’s computer suddenly beeped. He nearly jumped off his stool. “Yes! Cracked it! Look, Captain!” He shoved the computer at McLain. “That’s great, Dre,” McLain said, briskly. Dre blushed. He seemed to have just noticed the looks he was attracting. The bleached-blonde surfer girl was standing nearby, light eyebrows lifted. Whitney wondered why she wasn’t wearing skates like the other servers. “We should probably be going, then. Ladies.” McLain nodded cordially to Whitney and Leigh. “Have fun on your date.” He hurried out, Dre tripping after him, talking a mile a minute in his soft, trilling voice. Leigh looked at Whitney. “What do you suppose that was all about?” she said. 33 Chapter Three: Love Birds Marshall Townsend answered his back door barefoot, wearing threadbare jeans and a Fairfax High Knights T-shirt, and looking, in Seth’s opinion, good enough to eat with his inky-black hair tousled. He rarely bothered to comb it after he showered. “Hey, Philadelphia,” he said, cocking one hip against the doorframe. “Hey, Indiana.” Seth spun the basketball that perpetually rested against the Townsends’ garage on his index finger. “Can you come out and play?” “Let me get my shoes,” Marshall said. They shot hoops in the driveway, razzing one another like street ball players. Marshall was an exceptional athlete – he even gave Seth a run for his money, and werekin were graced with natural athleticism. Seth dribbled in for a layup; Marshall stole the ball, ducked his block, and sank a three-pointer. “Nice,” Seth said, fist-bumping him. “Hope you play like that on Friday.” “Me too,” Marshall said. “We got killed without you this week.” Seth made a face. Lydia had insisted he sit out the last game, on account of his brush with death. In his absence, the Knights had been trounced 65 to 42. They had already secured a spot at sectionals, but Marshall was being scoped by college scouts (he was going the med school route, like his father) and he and Seth both suspected colleges were more impressed by a winning team. The backboard rattled as Seth dunked – showing off, as he was only five-nine. “Do you think it’s cheating for me to use my werekin powers on the court?” he asked, as Marshall rebounded. Marshall shrugged. “Winning is winning, isn’t it?” “Indiana, it’s like I don’t even know you.” “You know what I mean,” Marshall said, wryly. “If you were using steroids or something, that would be cheating. Your strength and agility are just part of who you are.” “True,” Seth agreed. “My fabulousness is all natural.” “Also, you’re so modest,” Marshall said. The Stewards’ back door slammed then. Seth turned. J.J. waved to him as he loped across the lawn, skirting the open grave. 34 At the fence, he skinned, and a black jaguar shot off into the woods. Headed for Cleo’s, Seth presumed. Marshall took advantage of his distraction to fire off a basket. “Whitney tells me you raised the dead last night.” “Captain Hook is officially back in action,” Seth confirmed. “Dad thinks you blew up a meth lab. I heard him tell Mom on the phone that you and J.J. are hoodlums,” Marshall said. Seth shrugged. He was kind of a hoodlum. “Did your mom give you a hard time?” “Not me, so much. She thinks it was all J.J.’s fault.” Seth dribbled, measuring his next shot. “Search me how I got labeled the good tw – hey!” Marshall had snatched the ball out of his hands. He feinted right; Seth threw up his arms to block the three-pointer – And doubled over, gasping. Pain stabbed into his gut, as intense as it was unexpected, an electric shock along his new scar. Marshall was there in an instant, his hand on Seth’s back. “Hey, you okay?” Slowly, Seth straightened. The pain had subsided, leaving a dull ache under his ribs, but his forehead was clammy with sweat. He cleaned it with the hem of his shirt. Marshall slid a hand under his elbow. He was cute when he was worried, Seth thought. “You should lie down. Do you want me to get your mom?” “It’s nothing,” Seth said, with perhaps more surety than he felt. “I just need a breather. I have been flat on my back for a week, you know. I’m out of shape. Speaking of,” he bounded up the back steps, to prove his healthfulness, “do the terms of your parole allow you to join me on our run in the morning?” “I don’t see why not,” Marshall said. “I’m allowed out for ball practice, and running is kind of like practice.” Satisfied Seth. While Marshall fished two sodas out of the fridge – Coke for him, Mountain Dew for Seth – Seth wandered into the living room. He could tell Marshall was still worried. He insisted on quiet entertainment, so they agreed to watch a movie. Marshall kicked back on the wraparound leather sectional, watching as Seth surveyed the Townsends’ extensive film 35 collection. “How long do you think you’ll be grounded?” Seth asked. “According to Dad, until I tell them where I was and who I was with.” “So make something up,” Seth said. He was debating between Die Hard and Aliens. Action or horror, which was more romantic? “I thought about it, but…” Marshall shrugged. Seth rolled his eyes. Marshall was such a golden boy. “Anyway, if we win sectionals, I’m sure all will be forgiven. And by the way,” Marshall said, “I like your jacket.” Seth turned, regarding Marshall soberly across the room. “Indiana, tell me the truth. Do you have a fantasy about us making out under the bleachers while I’m wearing my letterman’s jacket?” “I do now,” Marshall grinned. Kissing Marshall was still new enough to make Seth nervous – almost shy, which he was not. He slunk over to the sofa, very aware that they were alone in the house: Dr. Townsend was at the hospital; Meredith was out of town; Whitney was on her Valentine’s Day date. Marshall watched him approach through hooded eyes, baby blues darkening from topaz to sapphire. Taking his hands, Seth drew him to his feet. “Are you sure you’re well enough for this?” Marshall asked, a little breathlessly. “Depends,” Seth said. “How athletic are you planning ‘this’ to be?” He was not prepared for Marshall to lock his arms around his waist, spinning them around with catlike grace so they tumbled onto the couch, tangled up with Seth trapped beneath him. Feverish kisses started on Seth’s lips, slid onto his neck. He moaned. He couldn’t help it. He didn’t know where this was coming from. Marshall was the one with boundaries, the one to say “stop” or “slow down.” He was not kissing like he intended to stop now. Seth’s jacket hit the floor, along with Marshall’s shoes, and then his shirt. Seth sat up enough to look at him, really look at him, the way he couldn’t at school with the other guys around. He stretched a hand out to touch the honey-colored skin of Marshall’s chest, felt his heart slamming against his ribs as he brought their mouths together again. Marshall’s hands were tracing Seth’s 36 ribcage through his shirt, sliding around to the small of his back, lifting Seth up against him, kissing deeper, and deeper. Seth wrapped his fingers up in Marshall’s curls. He felt like he was drowning in Marshall’s kisses, sinking into warm, thick syrup. “We need to stop,” Marshall said, raggedly. He rolled over so he was lying alongside Seth, the two of them scrunched up long ways on the couch. Seth’s cheek rested on his hand. Marshall’s head was pillowed on the crook of his arm. His cheeks were flushed. “Sorry,” he said. “I got a little carried away.” “Yeah, that was really awful for me. Please don’t ever do it again.” Marshall grinned. Seth laced their fingers together and kissed Marshall’s fingertips one at a time. Marshall had beautiful hands, long and thin and elegant. “Not that I’m complaining, but do you mind telling me what brought that on? Because if it was the jacket, I can wear it more often…” Marshall hid his face in the cushion. He was suddenly blushing. Really blushing, like the delicate rose of a four-alarm fire. “Please don’t make me tell you this,” he said, his voice muffled. “Hey, you started it,” Seth said. Marshall mumbled something unintelligible. Seth ran a finger down the line that split his chest, liking how that made Marshall’s stomach muscles tense. “Well, if you really don’t want to tell me, you probably could distract me…” He kissed Marshall’s shoulder. Then his collarbone. Then his throat. Then his jaw. Marshall tilted his chin up to meet the kisses, his mouth warm and soft against Seth’s, and Seth started to feel like his blood was on fire. They stumbled upstairs. Seth didn’t think either of them had made a conscious decision to leave the couch. They did not turn the lights on, but werecats could see just as well in the dark: Marshall’s bedroom (Seth noted very distantly, like he was viewing it underwater) was messier than usual – basketball gear strewn around the bean bag chairs, dirty laundry piled in front of the closet, college catalogs shifted to the floor to make way for a heavy, leather-bound book on the bedside table… Seth’s head hit the pillows – or would have, if Marshall’s hand hadn’t been in his hair, cupping his neck as his lips worked their way down Seth’s throat. His other hand was curled inside the waistband of Seth’s jeans. This was pushing the limits of Seth’s 37 intimacy experience, and truthfully, he had a case of the jitters. Probably why he started focusing on meaningless details, like the tear in the Larry Byrd poster beside Marshall’s bed, the blinking low battery light on his laptop, the Lemurian glyphs on the spine of the book on his nightstand – Hang on. Lemurian glyphs? “Indiana?” Seth said. “Mmm?” Marshall was exploring a spot under Seth’s ear that seemed to be connected to every nerve ending in his body. He struggled to concentrate. “Indiana, why do you have a book written in Lemurian?” “What?” Marshall’s fingers were working at the button on Seth’s jeans. He glanced at the nightstand. “Oh. Agathon gave that to me.” “Why?” “Because.” Marshall kissed Seth’s jaw, not focused on their conversation. “I asked him some questions, and he thought the book might help answer them.” Seth hadn’t realized his boyfriend was so chummy with their neighborhood necromancer. Sliding out from under Marshall, he sat up, adjusting his shirt to cover his scar. “When did you see Agathon? I thought you were grounded.” “I am grounded.” Marshall was still reclined on one elbow, looking at Seth with eyes of a deep, deep blue. “He gave that to me last weekend. After I got back.” After he got back from chauffeuring the Black Swan to destinations unknown, thereby enmeshing his golden boy self hipdeep in dangerous magical intrigue. “And why,” persisted Seth, “would Agathon give you a book you can’t even read?” “He did some translating for me. There are Post-It notes inside.” Seth was not even touching on the absurdity of that. Marshall noted his scowl and sat up, too, raking a hand through his hair, causing little pieces to stick out on the sides. Seth resisted the urge to smooth them down. “As for the why, that’s a little more complicated.” “I’ll try to keep up,” Seth said. Marshall sighed. “Would you please not act like this?” 38 “Act like what?” “Overprotective. I’m not your girlfriend, Philadelphia. I don’t need you to keep the big bad monsters away from me.” “Is that what this is?” Seth said. “You want to prove you’re the guy in this relationship?” Marshall’s jaw clenched; he looked away, glaring, and Seth tucked his hands into his sides, trying to hide that they were shaking. “This isn’t a video game, Marshall. You can’t hit reset and start a new level if you die. This is real, and it’s dangerous. I’ve been dealing with it a lot longer than you have. And, as previously discussed, Ursula LeRoi is a psychopath with a hell of a lot of firepower on her side, and I don’t want you getting hurt because of me. All right?” “Yeah, well, you may find this hard to believe, since you’re usually the center of the universe, but this isn’t actually about you,” Marshall said. Seth shoved off the bed, so swiftly Marshall gasped. Even in the dark, Seth knew he could see the changes in him – the black rosettes on his arms and cheeks, the claw-tips at the ends of his nails. Magic prickled along Seth’s spine. A shudder rippled under his skin. Marshall paled. Discipline, cub, Regent growled in Seth’s mind. Regent. The magic washed out of Seth, riding a wave of sorrow. He sank onto the edge of the mattress, staring hollowly out the window at the twinkling stars. It was not only grief he felt when he thought of Regent. It was guilt. Guilt because he felt grief. He never cared about you, Seth told himself. You shouldn’t care about him. Arms wrapped around him from behind. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean that.” “Then why did you say it?” Seth’s voice rang with hurt. He refused to turn and look at Marshall, whose chin rested on his shoulder. “You think I like the attention of being hunted down and collared? You think my life is glamorous because I’m a werecat?” “No.” Marshall tried to pull Seth down on the pillows with him. Seth resisted – like all cats, he could be famously stubborn – and Marshall sighed again. “Look, it’s just that you have this idea I only want to stop Chimera to protect you, and that’s not true. I have reasons of my own for wanting to be part of this fight. That’s all I was trying to say.” 39 “That’s not what you said, though. You said I think I’m the center of the universe.” “I wasn’t thinking clearly, okay? In case you didn’t notice, I didn’t bring you up here to talk.” Marshall’s mouth was very close to Seth’s ear when he said this. Seth was tempted to forget the fight, but he persevered. “I want to know why you’re so interested in Lemuria,” he said, “because I seem to remember you telling me you didn’t want to be a warrior.” “I don’t want to be a warrior. I can’t do what you do. I know that. But that doesn’t mean I can’t contribute.” Marshall picked up the book and handed it to Seth. “Here. See for yourself.” Reluctantly, still half-wanting to be mad, Seth flipped through the gilt-leafed pages. He could read the glyphs without translation; Regent had shown him the trick, letting his eyes slide across the symbols without trying to make sense of them, until they clicked in his mind. The book read like an alchemist’s handbook blended into a cutting-edge medical journal. Page after page was filled with notes on the properties of the four elements, processes for transmuting precious metals into potions, elixirs, and powders. There was a treatise on something called the Tria Prima, the Three Primes – mercury, sulfur, and salt – and hand-drawn diagrams of werekin anatomy, accompanied by extensive marginal notes on the magical properties of werekin blood. Seth recognized the neat, tidy script as Elijah Bishop’s. He looked up. “Planning to use me for your science fair project, Indiana?” “More like my entrance essay for med school,” Marshall teased back. “Agathon calls it a ‘grimoire.’ He said it’s a book of spells, like a magical diary. It belonged to Dr. Bishop.” He tossed the grimoire back on the nightstand and the boys stretched out on the pillows, facing one another. They weren’t touching, yet Seth was conscious of the heat of Marshall’s bare skin so close to his. “This interests me,” Marshall said, simply. “How you heal, naturally, with your own magic. How werekin use magic to make healing potions. And Bishop’s research is fascinating. He made advancements in human genetics modern 40 science hasn’t even begun to catch up with. Forget cloning sheep. He was cloning humans.” Seth’s forehead wrinkled. “Why would Chimera Enterprises have been interested in cloning humans?” “It was a by-product of the reproductive technology that allowed them to inseminate human mothers with werekin DNA from the Ark.” Marshall related this matter-of-factly. “Great,” Seth said. “So you want to know more about how Chimera breeds us?” “Look, Seth, I know Bishop and LeRoi did some despicable things. Unforgivable things, even. But that doesn’t mean every bit of science to come out of a Chimera laboratory is bad. If I could learn more about Healing, then the next time there’s a battle, or the next time you or J.J. or Dre or Emery gets hurt or sick, I could do something real. Save lives. Do you know much it sucked, sitting by your bedside hoping you didn’t bleed to death from that hole in your stomach and not being able to do a damn thing to help you?” “So this is about me,” Seth said. Marshall groaned. Smirking, Seth reached out, placing a hand lightly against Marshall’s cheek. “You did do something real, you know. Protecting the Black Swan – that was real.” Abruptly, Marshall rolled onto his back. Seth suspected he had just inadvertently drawn close to whatever had been making Marshall so somber lately. “Philadelphia, if I told you a secret,” Marshall said, “would you not tell it to anyone? Not even J.J.?” “A secret about you,” Seth asked, “or about werekin?” “About werekin,” Marshall said. Seth hesitated. But what could Marshall possibly know about werekin that J.J., raised by the founder of Chimera Enterprises, wouldn’t know? “Okay. I won’t tell,” he said. “Promise?” “I’ll pinky-swear, if you want me to.” Marshall took a breath. “The Black Swan told me her parents weren’t werekin. They were human.” He paused, letting that sink in, and added, “Both of them.” For a moment, Seth was too purely astonished to respond. Then he shook his head. “No. That’s impossible. Werekin magic passes from parent to child. Even when two hunters have a child, their children aren’t werekin. There’s no other – ” 41 Downstairs, a door slammed. Seth was on his feet, between Marshall and the door, in a flash – unaware that he had skinned until he heard the growl in his throat and looked down, at his tawny fur, spotted with black rosettes. His long, banded tail swished the floor. On the bed, Marshall was gaping at him. He had only seen Seth in his jaguar skin on two occasions, and he looked somewhat unnerved. Seth thought of Cleo, how she would sit down right beside him, like he was a housecat instead of an apex predator, and sink her fingers into his fur. But that wasn’t fair. Cleo had been raised among werekin. Marshall hadn’t. “Marshall?” The remaining blood drained from Marshall’s cheeks. “Oh, crap, my father – ” But Seth, skinned back into a human, was already at the window, soundlessly lifting the sash. As he stepped onto the roof, Marshall just managed to catch his wrist. “I’m sorry,” he whispered, throwing an anxious glance at his bedroom door. “I don’t want to throw you out…” “It’s cool,” Seth whispered back. Being discovered, shirtless, in bed with the hoodlum next door was not the ideal way for Marshall to come out. “See you tomorrow, for our run?” “Six o’clock,” Marshall promised. “And Seth?” He leaned out the window, pulling Seth in for a long, soft kiss. “Happy Valentine’s Day,” he whispered. It wasn’t until later, back in his own room with the covers tucked around his chin, that Seth remembered his letterman’s jacket. It was still on Marshall’s living room floor, on top of Marshall’s shoes, and Marshall’s shirt. *** The guard at Fort King’s gate recognized McLain’s Jeep and waved him through. Will McLain frowned. He would have to remind Jensen that the men needed to be checking everyone’s credentials. Ursula LeRoi had many means of slipping through Operation Swan Song’s net. They couldn’t risk her finding her way to the Ark. 42 In the passenger seat, Dre Alfaro had his legs tucked under him, Ursula LeRoi’s PDA cupped gingerly in his small hands, as though it was a bomb and one false move could set it off. McLain had never seen him so still. Fidget was Dre’s default setting. McLain parked the Jeep in a stretch of gravel along the razortopped fence. “Did you call J.J.?” Dre bobbed his head. “He’s on his way.” Starlight dappled the former prison’s liquid-black walls, sliding across the stone almost as though the building were alive, and breathing. McLain could feel the deep, deep hum of the Ark in the soles of his boots as they crossed the courtyard to the main entrance, where he tapped a code into the keypad. Dre could feel it also. His small hands fluttered up, swiping his bangs out of his eyes, which darted this way and that, very much like a bird’s. “Have you ever seen it?” he asked suddenly. “Have you ever seen the Ark?” McLain shook his head. The corrugated steel doors were rattling upward; he waited for them to finish before he spoke, ushering Dre inside ahead of him. “LeRoi didn’t publicize that it was housed here. Now the Alpha Clan guards it.” “Agathon would let you see it, if you asked,” Dre said, kindly. “Probably,” McLain agreed. Though he would not ask. Will McLain was one-hundred-percent human. Just because he could see werekin did not mean he was a member of their race. As Derek Childers never tired of reminding him. Tonight, at least, it was not Derek hurrying toward them down one of the prison’s many staircases, a fact for which McLain was grateful. Cleo snapped to attention, arms stiff at her sides. “Sir,” she said. No matter how many times McLain told her to call him Will, Cleo insisted on calling him sir. “Is everyone here?” he asked. “Yes sir,” Cleo said. Dre and McLain followed her through a twisting maze of obsidian corridors, past empty cellblocks and across glassed-in skywalks, to a wing guarded by a pair of Marines. They saluted McLain, who returned the salute as the glass doors opened on a pneumatic whoosh. On the other side was a high-tech surveillance room paneled in monitors, each one alive with satellite images. Men and women, 43 some in uniforms, some in lab coats, manned the stations around the room. Dominating the room through sheer physical size was Ben Schofield. He was talking to J.J. in the corner, scratching the whiskers on his much-creased cheeks. The buttons of his XXXL flannel shirt strained across his massive chest. J.J. looked even slighter than he really was standing in Ben’s shadow. Of all the werekin McLain had known, only Werner Regent could rival Ben Schofield for size. Ben looked up when McLain entered. “Will.” Will said hello, to Ben and to J.J. Dre had turned aside, booting a corporal out of his station and plugging LeRoi’s PDA into a data port on the sleek black computer. NASA would have been hardpressed to compete with the computational power in this room, Operation Swan Song’s beating heart, or its central nervous system, depending on how you wanted to look at it. It interfaced with every American satellite in orbit, and thanks to Dre’s hacker abilities, recently some that weren’t American. It also monitored geothermal sensors planted in the seabed around Mt. Hokulani and a high-powered telescope, housed in a small New Mexico facility called Roswell, that made the Hubble look like a pair of binoculars. “You really cracked the encryption?” J.J. said, with interest. As if in reply, the screens flashed, all of the images dissolving into a scrolling list of property names and addresses. All owned by Chimera Enterprises, none officially listed under Project Ark. J.J. leaned forward, scanning them. The greenish glow of the screen colored his fair hair a white shade of gold. “Gotcha,” he said, softly. “Dre, you are brilliant.” “No big. Once you figure out the algorithm it’s like taking candy from a baby. But that’s not even the best part.” Dre’s hands fluttered around the keyboard. His cap was tipped at a jaunty angle. “Check this puppy out.” An image flickered onto the screen. J.J. rocked back on his heels. “Is that – ” “Uh-huh,” Dre said. “And is it – ” “Sure is,” Dre nodded. 44 J.J. swore under his breath. “She found them. She actually found them.” Cleo was looking between the two of them like her head was on a swivel. Ben coughed. “Maybe y’all could let us in on what it is we’re lookin’ at?” he suggested, in his thick Louisiana drawl. “Right. Sorry.” Scooting to his feet, Dre walked over and tapped a long list of numbers on the screen: 03°06′0″S 60°01′0″W. “These coordinates tell us we’re looking at a satellite image of Manaus, Brazil.” “The Amazon Rainforest?” McLain said. “Yup,” Dre chirped. “If we zoom in,” he tapped the screen again, and the image zoomed closer, now showing, instead of a blue-and-green aerial view, the top of a dense jungle canopy threaded by a blue-black river, “we see that this location is not in the city of Manaus proper. It’s in the rainforest near Manaus. If we switch to infrared – ” Dre tapped another button, and the screen switched from Technicolor to red-and-black, with a heavy concentration of red in the southeast corner near the river “ – we see that whatever is out there, it’s giving off one mother of a heat signature. I’m thinking power source.” “Nuclear?” Cleo guessed. “Think bigger. Like next-gen bigger.” Like alien technology bigger, McLain thought. He had a pretty good idea what it was, and he suspected Ben Schofield did, too. The Source. When Chimera Enterprises recovered the Ark from Mt. Hokulani, they had also recovered a treasure trove of ancient Lemurian texts. Once the glyphs were deciphered, it was discovered that prior to the island’s sinking, the White Swan had sent one clan, the Tortoise Clan, away from Lemuria to guard what Elijah Bishop had roughly translated as the Source, the key to accessing the power of the Totems – an alien craft they had left behind for their werekin descendants, in case Earth ever proved too inhospitable a home. The White Swan had destroyed Lemuria, and her kindred with it, to stop humanity from securing that power, to protect humankind from its own insatiable thirst for power. Several millennia later, McLain thought, humankind hadn’t evolved all that much. 45 “This was listed as one of Chimera’s holdings?” Cleo sounded puzzled. Dre shook his head. “No. It was listed under a name. Abraham Bishop.” There was an audible intake of breath from Ben. McLain turned. “Give us the room,” he commanded. A few people looked startled. After all, McLain was not in uniform, and not everyone at the fort recognized him on sight. But he was still a Marine, that much was obvious by his carriage, and the room quickly cleared, the pneumatic doors sealing with a click. McLain turned back to Ben. “How do you want to play this?” The creases in Ben’s cheeks deepened. He was fighting a smile. “Well, Captain, I assume since we just discovered the probable location of the Tortoise Clan, you’d need to call General Burke.” “And I’d assume you’d need to call the other Commanders,” McLain rejoined, “but I don’t see you picking up the phone, Papa Bear.” The smile broke loose on Ben’s grizzled face. Cleo still looked bewildered, but J.J. was watching him avidly. “I think we could handle this ourselves, just this once,” Ben said. “I’ll go,” J.J. said, automatically. “You will not,” Ben growled. “You’ll stay right here and keep an eye on your brother. You know LeRoi won’t rest until she adds the blood of the Jaguar Clan to the Ark. If anybody can protect Seth, it’s you. You aren’t to leave him, and that’s an order.” J.J. scowled. Cleo stepped forward. “I’ll go. I don’t have any idea what’s going on here, but I’ll go.” “No.” J.J. spoke flatly. “I need you here. For Seth.” “J.J. – ” “I’ll go,” Ben tabled. “Ben, you can’t!” There was a flash of desperation in J.J.’s golden eyes. “The only reason the Commanders haven’t turned on one another completely yet is that you’re here to be the voice of reason. Without you, I guarantee it will all fall apart in a day.” “I’m the only Commander in this room, J.J.,” Ben said, firmly. “I’m the only one who can authorize a mission of this magnitude.” 46 J.J. stiffened. He wasn’t used to having rank pulled on him. “Fine,” he said, tersely. “But you can’t go by yourself. You should take Angelo, or Captain McLain, or – ” “Angelo Alfaro is still recuperating from the injuries he got during our last battle, and Captain McLain is needed here,” Ben said Ben Schofield was a big man; when he talked, people tended to listen. J.J. nodded curtly, and stepped back to stand beside Cleo. “Now I want you all to swear by the Black Swan you won’t tell anyone where I’ve gone, or mention anything about Brazil or the Tortoise Clan. I’ll leave word with Melody and Derek that I’ve gone on a mission of the utmost import, but if what’s out there is really what I think is out there, there is no place else on Earth Ursula LeRoi will be. This may be our only chance to capture her, and I’ll be danged if her spy in our ranks blows that for us. I don’t want a word of this breathed to another living soul until I get back. Ya hear?” They all nodded to show they understood. Ben clapped McLain on the shoulder with one paw-like hand. “Rest easy, Will,” he said, quietly. “Caroline is safe for now. If LeRoi is out there, I’ll find her.” McLain just nodded, though deep down, he wondered if, in luring Ben Schofield, the founder of the Resistance, away from Fort King right now, Ursula LeRoi didn’t have them right where she wanted them. 47 Chapter Four: Mixed Messages At night, the jungle sky was a black sea dotted with stars like glowing pearls. Steamy heat escaped the verdantly green ferns clustered around the base of the familiar bowl-shaped tree; in its shadow was a grave, topped by a concrete statue of a child-sized angel with praying hands. Moss had grown over the inscription, leaving only one line visible. Sleeping with the Stars. Beside the tree rushed a swift-flowing river, blue-black as the sky above, pouring thunderously over a distant waterfall. Marshall stood on a tall finger of rock in the center of the white-capped rapids, wearing a hooded white robe splashed with scarlet glyphs. His feet were shackled to the rock. In his hands he clasped a golden orb. Light flared inside the orb, showing Seth the outlines of the bones in Marshall’s fingers, like the filament inside a light bulb. Seth cried out – the light had vanished and Marshall was gone, the chains that had bound him coiled on the rock like silver snakes. The golden orb was ascending into the sky. Stars spun crazily away from it, zigzagging into new constellations. The river began to churn, the water darkening from midnight-blue to blood-red. A cacophonous rumble overwhelmed the thundering current. The rock rose from the river, higher and higher, wider and wider, splitting J.J.’s empty grave wide open. The rock became a pristine island populated by green trees, taller than any trees on Earth, undulating down from a central peak to a beach of sparkling white sand. Seth felt the magic of that place singing in his blood. Along the shore were gathered animals of every species, from lizards to apes, yet Seth knew these were no animals. They weren’t even werekin. They were something else, something older, something more powerful. Something not of this Earth. The orb’s light grew, awakening the colors of the nighttime jungle to painful vibrancy. Seth shielded his eyes with his arm. The stars themselves seemed to be peeling back, as though the sky was a curtain tearing in two; out of the light came a young girl’s voice, soft and melodic, the music of wings on the wind. “This is how it ends.” 48 *** Seth woke to the screeching of his Hello Kitty alarm clock. Around him, the house was dark and quiet. Minutes later, dressed in his Gym uniform of shorts and Tshirt, he was in the kitchen lacing up his tennis shoes for his morning run when the back door opened and J.J. sauntered in, mud-spattered and dew-damp. Seth choked. “You spent the night with Cleo?” “Seth, you have sex on the brain.” J.J. opened the refrigerator. After a brief and not entirely satisfied appraisal of its veganfriendly contents, he selected a jug of soy milk and chugged straight from the carton. “We had a late night with McLain and Ben at Fort King,” he said, swiping his hand across his milk mustache. “Then I went for a swim in the creek, to decompress. Fell asleep on the bank.” “Weren’t you worried about hunters?” “Do I look worried?” In point of fact, J.J. looked like he could eat a hunter for breakfast. Seth threaded his house key through his shoelace, stalling in the hope that Marshall was just running late. He always beat Seth outside for their runs, being one of those annoyingly chipper morning people, but today, the Townsends’ drive was empty. “Just FYI,” J.J. said, “Ben’s gone on a mission for the Resistance. I can’t say more than that, but I thought you’d want to know. He won’t be around for a while.” Much as he understood the need for top-secret intel to remain, well, secret, Seth was starting to find Operation Swan Song’s needto-know policies rather grating. Seth was the closest thing Ben Schofield had to family. If anyone had a right to know where he was and what he was doing, it was Seth. But arguing with J.J. would do no good, so he just said, “Well, FYI, now that we live under the same roof, you can stop with the freaky mind-meld dreams.” J.J. looked up from the banana he was peeling. “I haven’t been sending you dreams. You heard Cleo. Dream-walking is complicated. I don’t even have the tools here to perform the ritual.” He took a giant bite of banana. “Fy? Whash did you dweam?” 49 Seth hesitated. Last night had been the first time he had experienced one of his prophetic-feeling nightmares since J.J. had come to live with them, he realized. But if J.J. hadn’t sent him the dream, who had? “Nothing,” he said, blowing it off. “Don’t forget we have school.” J.J. sighed. For February, the morning was mild. Seth jogged north along Kings Lane, dragging his feet the first mile, holding onto the waning hope that Marshall might still catch up. They followed the same route every morning. Could be Marshall had overslept and would trot up behind him any second… Yeah. Wishful thinking. The wide sidewalks of Castle Estates soon gave way to the paved running trails in the local park. Frost glazed the grass, silvered the swing sets and the merry-go-rounds; a spider web glittered between the bare branches of a hickory, framing the sickle moon. Seth’s body tingled into wakefulness, his mind clearing as his lungs opened and his muscles stretched out. Running had started on orders from Regent. Seth had resented it at first – waking at the crack of dawn to poke along in his human skin, ten times slower than he could run as a jaguar, even as he clocked five-minute miles. Eventually, though, he had come to look forward to his runs. They gave him time to think. Today he thought about the secret Marshall had confided to him. The Black Swan had said her parents were human. She had to be mistaken. Werekin magic required a direct blood link. If grandma was a werekin but your mom or dad wasn’t, sorry, Charlie, no chance of skinning. Once the magic skipped a generation, that was that. Maybe the Black Swan didn’t know her real parents, Seth mused. All he knew for sure about her was that she had not been born in captivity; LeRoi would never have let a prize like that slip through her fingers. She could have been born in the Underground to werekin parents and handed over to humans to raise, never told the truth of her heritage. Still, it was strange. Seth wished he had some way to check out the story, but he didn’t even know the Black Swan’s name. That was a secret only the highest-ranking members of the Resistance were privy to. 50 After his cool-down, Seth practiced his karate stances in the backyard for half an hour, then pushed himself through a few roundhouse kicks to be sure he wouldn’t keel over in Gym like he had playing basketball last night. Cam would be delighted if he passed out again. Seth could already hear the hairball jokes. He felt great this morning. No twinges in his scar, no weakness in the knees, nothing. He turned a back handspring into a spinning kick just for the hell of it, and as he came down, he heard it. A footfall, beside the garage. He spun around, hissing. “Easy, tiger,” someone said. Marshall stepped out of the shadows, holding something out to Seth, hooked on his index finger. “Thought you might want this back,” he said. It was Seth’s letterman’s jacket. Seth took it and draped it over his arm. “What did you tell your father?” he asked. He couldn’t read Marshall’s expression, but he didn’t seem as freaked out as Seth would have expected had he just come out to his parents. “I told him you came over to practice and felt sick, so I had you lie down on the couch,” Marshall said. He sounded pleased with himself. Seth was impressed. For Marshall, it was an inspired lie. “Did he buy that?” “I think so. He gave me back my keys.” Marshall spun the keys to his Audi TT Coupe around on his index finger. Grinning, Seth snaked his arms around his boyfriend’s neck for a quick, and sweaty, congratulatory kiss. Disaster averted. Their hormonal stupidity had not outed Marshall. Seth was relieved. Wasn’t he? *** By the time Seth had showered and dressed, Lydia was gone for the day – yoga class with the other Castle Estates moms, then top-secret plotting with the Resistance at Fort King. Leigh and J.J. were in the kitchen, glaring in opposite directions, when Seth came in. They both smiled at him. Ping pong time. “How was your date?” Seth asked Leigh, dropping a Chocolate Fudge Pop-Tart into the toaster. Oh how he missed Lydia’s blueberry-and-banana pancakes. She hadn’t cooked 51 breakfast for them since Jack had moved out. Or since J.J. had moved in, if you wanted to slice it that way. “Oh my God, it was so romantic,” gushed Leigh, and proceeded into a detailed moment-by-moment account of her evening with Bryce. J.J. sipped his OJ and ignored her. Only J.J. could ignore someone so pointedly, Seth thought. “He even got me a present, see?” Leigh extended her wrist, displaying a delicate gold bracelet with a basketball charm dangling from its links. The bracelets were all the rage amongst the girls at Fairfax High. Leigh had been dying for one, but, according to girl logic, a boy was supposed to buy it for you. Once again, Seth thanked the Totems he had been born male. “What did Emery get Whitney?” he asked. “A book of poetry. A used book, that somebody else had written all over.” Leigh’s eye roll conveyed how lame she found this. Seth thought it was inspired. Whitney was an Audre Lourde in the making. “Anyway, Bryce is off the crutches as of today, but his orthopedist says he’s out the rest of the season. His dad is so furious.” Basketball was life to the fathers of Seth’s teammates. If Agathon had promised Dr. Townsend it would ensure the Knights winning state, Seth thought he would have offered Whitney up as a human sacrifice. “At least that means he’ll be able to dance at prom,” he said. Leigh’s catty smile said these were her thoughts exactly. “Are you dating Bryan now?” J.J. asked. Leigh stared at him. Neither she nor Seth had realized he had been paying any attention to their conversation. “Bryce,” she corrected, after a moment. “And no. Not, like, officially. Not that it would be any of your business if I was.” Be nice, Seth mouthed at her. J.J. didn’t make many overtures of friendship. Showing an interest in Leigh’s love life, much as it pained Seth to think those words in combination, was a positive development. Sighing, Leigh plastered a passably friendly smile in place. “J.J., do you think you’ll go out for the basketball team?” J.J. looked horrified. The Audi’s horn sounded in the drive. Leigh jumped off her stool, smoothing her short pink dress down over her tights. Seth grabbed his backpack off the couch, J.J. slipped his arms through 52 his worn leather jacket, and they headed for the door – just as the phone rang. “Let the machine get it,” Leigh said. “We’re already late.” Tardiness would give Dr. Gideon an excuse to assign him another detention, which would mean Coach would bench him, again, yet instinct told Seth to pick up the phone. “I’ll be right behind you,” he promised. Exasperated, Leigh shoved J.J. onto the porch. “Hey,” Seth heard him protest, as he grabbed the cordless off the hallway table. “Hello?” Static crackled. “Seth Michael?” “Ben? Is that you?” Most of the reply was lost in a burst of white noise. Seth held the phone away from his ear. He caught the word McLain, and then, “…out of Fairfax,” Ben’s Louisiana drawl faded back in. “D’ya hear me, runt?” Seth shook his head, though obviously Ben could not see him. “Ben, what about Fairfax? Where are you? J.J. said you were on a mission…” Crackles and pops, interspersed with “bishop,” “spy,” “tortoise,” and a name. Caroline. “Who’s Caroline?” Seth asked, desperately. “Hello? Papa Bear? Ben? Ben?” Briefly, the static cleared from the line. “They’re coming for you,” Ben said, just before the phone in Seth’s hand went dead. 53 Chapter Five: Bloodlines “This is ridiculous,” J.J. griped, for only the eighteenth time in ten minutes. “I should be at Fort King right now, telling McLain and Melody – ” “Shh,” Seth hissed. They had joined the stream of Gap jeans and Abercrombie shirts flooding from the upper lot, where the Castle Estates kids parked, toward Fairfax High, a checkered black-and-white stone edifice that could have doubled as a castle. The morning was warm; some of the Haven kids were lounging around the statue that guarded the front doors – a medieval knight slaying a three-headed monster with a lion’s body and a scorpionstinger tail. Knowing what he knew now about Chimera Enterprises’ connections to Fairfax via Fort King, that statue finally made sense to Seth. He waved to their sandy-haired werehyena Ozzie, who was sitting on the grass strumming a guitar for a group that included the olive-skinned wereotter Zoe Campbell, a bushy-haired boy simply known as Squirrel, and, somewhat to Seth’s annoyance, Quinn O’Shea. Miss Vixen’s cornflower blue eyes followed J.J. up the front steps. Seth prodded him to walk faster. “We can’t go shouting about the werekin Resistance in the hallways, J.J., all right?” Especially not when every single person was stopping to gape at them. After six, going on seven, weeks at Fairfax High, Seth no longer attracted many stares. His dyed hair and rosette tattoos and secondhand clothes should have made him a loser freak to the trust fund Castle Estates crowd. Instead, Marshall, everyone’s favorite golden boy, had adopted him into his pack. Add in the fact that Seth was a world-class ballplayer, and he stood a chance of being elected to Student Council. Something told him J.J. was not going to mix that well here. Rumor had already circulated that Seth and Leigh’s long-lost cousin was in town, recently arrived from boarding school in Connecticut. Not much about J.J. screamed polo and yacht clubs. More like machetes and pipe bombs. 54 He had at least given up the camouflage for jeans and a black T-shirt, though he had insisted on keeping the combat boots. Seth was certain he had a knife stashed on him someplace. Marshall, Whitney, and Leigh had veered off to their respective classrooms. Seth was steering J.J. to the main office. Or trying to. J.J. was not being cooperative. “If it was important, Ben will call back,” Seth reasoned, guiding him around a gaggle of bug-eyed girls. “Besides, we don’t know anything is wrong.” “Yeah, ‘they’re coming for you,’ that doesn’t sound like a warning.” J.J.’s tone was sour. Seth sighed. “We’ll go straight to Fort King after school, okay? Tell Ms. McLain about it if you want. She can call McLain and have him run a trace on the phone line, tell us where Ben called from.” They had reached the office. Ms. Ingrid McLain, Principal was lettered on the glass door. J.J. planted his feet, obstinately refusing to take another step. Seth shifted his backpack to his opposite shoulder. He was cutting it close to beat the bell to first period. “Please, J.J.? Let’s just try to have a normal day.” The look J.J. gave him was almost sympathetic. “You honestly think that’s possible, don’t you?” Before Seth could answer, J.J. had stepped inside the office. Ms. McLain bounced out of her office to greet them. Frizzy dark hair was poofed around her white headband; she was so petite the counter hid most of the rest of her from the neck down. “All recovered from your motorcycle accident, Seth?” she asked, with a knowing wink. “Totally up to snuff, Ms. M-C,” Seth said. Wrecking his Yamaha (Seth stifled a yearning moan) was his cover story for having missed a week of school, since he couldn’t very well bring in a note explaining that he had been shot at close range by a silver bullet during a battle with a super-evil shadow organization bent on world domination. Of course Ms. McLain knew the truth – Ingrid McLain had been helping werekin disappear into the Underground for decades – but she was on Seth’s side. She wouldn’t say anything. “Coach will be glad to hear it,” Ms. McLain said now. “And you.” She beamed at J.J. “You must be Jeremy.” 55 Seth made the introductions and passed off the envelope of J.J.’s bogus transcripts, which Ms. McLain knew were bogus, just as she knew Seth and J.J. were really brothers. He promised his twin he would see him at lunch, and hurried out of the office. The bell began to ring as he was sprinting down the deserted hallway to the Bio lab. Should have asked for a hall pass, Seth berated himself. Pouring on a burst of werekin speed, he vaulted through the door, hurtled Bryce’s backpack, and landed on the stool next to his lab partner, pretty little Yena Lee, a half-second before the bell died. “Cutting it close, Mr. Sullivan.” Dr. Aaron Gideon turned from the chalkboard, muddy brown eyes observing Seth through his thick glasses, the way you might examine slime-mold under a microscope. “I think you just used one of your nine lives.” Not-so-veiled reference to Seth’s rebellion against dissecting cats a few weeks ago. Had Leigh not been petitioning the school board to ban animal dissection from Fairfax High, Gideon might have let it go. Then again, maybe not. He loathed ballplayers, as a consequence of having been a runty evil nerd all of his life. The transcripts Regent had faked up for Seth portrayed him as a homeschooled whiz kid, leading Ms. McLain to track him in with the overachievers. Seth wondered if Jack had made J.J. into a brainiac, too. It would be cool if they had the same schedule. From vertebrate anatomy, Gideon’s class had moved on to genetics. Yena scooted close to Seth, their worksheet between them. It was filled with blank tables, each divided into four parts: a Punnett square, a diagram for determining genotype. Seth had read about them last week when he was confined to bed, once he had tired of soap operas. “Sorry about your bike,” Yena whispered, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear. “Are you getting another one?” Seth shook his head. “Mom said no more motorcycles.” “Dude, that sucks,” lamented Bryce, who was seated across the tall black-topped lab table from Seth with his lab partner, Dre Alfaro. As usual, Dre was absorbed in his battered MacBook and spared Seth only a quick wave. “How was your date?” Seth asked, icily. Bryce colored. “Listen up, people.” Gideon clapped his hands. Chalk dust plumed around him. On the board he had written a bunch of words 56 like allele, zygote, homozygous, gametes. Seth’s eyes crossed just thinking of the vocabulary list he would have to memorize for their exam. “Today we are studying how traits pass from parent to offspring. Who can tell me the difference between genotype and phenotype?” Hands shot up all over the room. Seth’s was not one of them, so naturally, Gideon said, “Mr. Sullivan?” Seth sat up straight on his stool. “Genotype is your genetic makeup. Your DNA. Phenotype is your physical characteristics, based on your genotype. For instance, I have genes for being blonde, good-looking, and athletic.” Yena giggled. Gideon glared at him. Seth smirked. He had reviewed the chapter after his run, knowing Gideon would call on him, like he always did. Gideon went on to lecture about the processes of meiosis and fertilization, the differences between dominant and recessive alleles, before finally turning them loose to complete their worksheets. Some nonsense about figuring the probability of albino parents having an albino child based on how many capital and lowercase A’s ended up in the Punnett squares. “You know,” Bryce said, “I thought making a baby was supposed to be more stimulating than this.” If he was thinking about Leigh just then, Seth decided, he might have to break his other leg. Stupid as the exercise was, it got Seth thinking about the secret Marshall had shared with him. Before the battle at Fort King, Seth had learned Quinn O’Shea was not werekin. Her mother, Josephine, was, a Commander in the Resistance even, but the magic had skipped Quinn. Had she been born in captivity, she would have been raised a hunter, like Cleo. Because she had been born free, she had lived a relatively normal human life, surrounded by werekin. The Black Swan had the opposite experience, if what she had told Marshall was true: a werekin born to human parents. Could werekin magic ever be a recessive allele, Seth wondered, covered over in a generation – your mom never skins, but if you looked at her genes, you would see she was genetically coded to be a werecrow? Chimera would probably have picked up on something like that in their labs, but werekin had been having children in the Underground for decades. It was possible they might not know 57 everything about werekin genetics. Then again, if the Black Swan hadn’t been born in captivity, it was possible her parents hadn’t been, either. Could that explain why she believed she had been born to human parents? Because they had never skinned, though the gene was there, waiting to be passed on to their children? It made a certain amount of sense. Skin wasn’t dependent on your parents’ – like Seth and J.J.: Thomas Sullivan had been a werefox, yet here they were, werejaguars. Skin depended on your mystical connection to the werekin ancestors, the Totems. That was why some breeds were more rare, and more powerful, than others. Blood. It all came back to blood. The question was, if it turned out the Black Swan had no werekin blood, where had she come by her magic? *** Leigh Steward had just slid into her seat in second-period study hall and was showing her charm bracelet off to Shanti Bruce, who she used to be friends with, before Shanti had made the cheerleading squad in ninth grade and Leigh hadn’t, when a pert voice chirped, “Hi, Leigh.” Leigh looked up. A small, skinny black boy was hovering beside her desk, fidgeting with the strap on a beat-up backpack. Leigh blinked. “What do you want?” It came out more sharply than she intended, and Dre Alfaro’s smile faltered. “I – I have study hall now,” he said, softly, his quick, dark eyes darting from Leigh to Shanti. Shanti had swept her hair over one shoulder, a cool smile Leigh knew only too well playing around her pink-frosted lips. There was a reason Shanti Bruce and Cam Foss were so well-matched as a couple. “I usually sit back there.” He gestured vaguely to a table behind Leigh’s. Well. Leigh fumbled for something to say. She knew all about Dre and the other Haven kids being werekin now, obviously, and maybe she and Dre had hung out a few times since the battle at Fort King, at Cleo’s, which seemed to be headquarters for the teenage Resistance, and maybe he sometimes made her laugh with his corny bird jokes, but she had never dreamed he would think 58 they were friends. Or that he would, like, expect Leigh to talk to him, in front of people. To Leigh’s horror, Dre sat down at the table in front of hers, plopping his backpack on the floor. What in God’s name was he thinking, wearing that ridiculous cap to school? And suspenders? Leigh shook her head. And she thought Seth had no fashion sense. Shanti fixed one of the pleats in her cheerleading skirt. “Aren’t you Angelo Alfaro’s brother?” she asked, her disdain obvious. “Food Stamp Row” was Cam’s name for Haven Heights. “Yup,” Dre said brightly. He pulled his feet up on his chair and rested his chin on his knees. He might have been cute if he cut that stupid floppy hair, but there was no way around the unmistakable aura of nerd he exuded. “Is that from your boyfriend?” He nodded at Leigh’s bracelet. She stuck her hands under her desk and laced her fingers together. “Bryce isn’t my boyfriend,” she said, glancing sideways at Shanti, who was listening to every word. “But you said he was. At the diner.” Dre looked puzzled. “You said you were on a date with your boyfriend.” “I guess Bryce is taking you to prom, then,” Shanti said, slyly. “Since he’s your boyfriend.” Leigh could feel the blush creeping up her neck. Shanti would be going to prom with Cam, like she had gone to Homecoming with Cam, yet another dance Leigh had not been asked to. (Well, she had been asked. But she had been waiting for Marshall to ask her. This was before Seth had moved to town and Leigh had realized her utter lack of a gay-dar.) “Yes, well,” she snipped, “I just meant that we were on a date. Okay?” “So you don’t have a boyfriend?” Dre sounded baffled, like Seth still was sometimes when confronted with the intricacy of human high school politics. Leigh would have felt sorry for him had it not been for Shanti smirking at the ceiling. “No,” she said, coolly. “I don’t have a boyfriend.” “Maybe Dre will take you to prom,” Shanti said. “He is an eleventh-grader.” She said it sweetly. Anytime Shanti adopted that sugary voice, Leigh knew she was really being mean. Dre didn’t know that, though. “Sure I’ll take you, if you want to go,” he agreed eagerly. 59 He had this way of speaking where all the words sort of tumbled together, like his thoughts were too quick for his tongue. “Did you want to go?” “Sorry.” Leigh’s voice was cold, as cold as her cheeks were hot. “I don’t date freaks.” She looked pointedly at Dre’s newsboy cap. He blinked, the insult – and the fact that Leigh, Seth’s sister, had insulted him – sinking in slowly. Then he turned around, doffing the cap and dropping it, with a sheepishness that nearly made Leigh wince, onto his backpack. Shanti smiled sympathetically at her, like, God, what a loser. Leigh tried to smile back, but the muscles that controlled her smile reflex seemed to have frozen. *** “I feel like I should explain about Leigh,” Bryce said. He had just settled into his seat in English. Seth’s was in the back row. Miss Janowitz did not have a prejudice against ballplayers – just punks from South Philly. She never called on Seth in class, and she hemorrhaged red ink all over his essays. He couldn’t place a semicolon to please the woman. Seth decided to take pity on Bryce, who was looking woeful. Bryce was a nice guy. He had always been good to Seth, and he was on Marshall’s side against Cam. If Leigh had to date somebody, Bryce was an all right choice. “She liked the bracelet you got her,” he offered. “Really?” Bryce perked up. “Do you think she’d say yes if I asked her out again?” “Hmm, let me consult my crystal ball…” Seth grinned. “Yeah, man. Go for it.” “Okay, class.” Miss Janowitz had stepped up to the podium. Bryce quickly turned around. Miss Janowitz was young, pretty in a librarianish way, with her plaid skirts and solid-color sweaters, big dark eyes that made her look like a curious owl. Bryce spent most of her classes drooling onto his notebook. Seth spent them mentally rehearsing his karate stances. Today, however, he was startled into alertness as the classroom door opened, interrupting Miss Janowitz as she waxed profound on 60 the relationship between Desdemona and Othello. J.J. slunk into the room. Heads swiveled from the doorway to the back row, every face conveying the same thought: Hey! They could be twins! “Excuse me,” said J.J., in his princely fashion. Miss Janowitz was gaping at him, mouth slightly ajar. No one interrupted her lectures. “I was told to have you sign this.” He held out his registration slip. Miss Janowitz was so flabbergasted she signed it. On Seth’s first day of school, he was sure he had appeared awkward, trying to remember not to arch his spine when he stretched, not to purr when he laughed, all of the catlike behavior that came naturally to him. J.J. didn’t bother with any of that. He padded down the aisle on the balls of his feet, spine curving as he settled in next to Seth. Reluctantly, their classmates returned their attention to the front of the room. The twins slouched down, feet propped on the backs of the desks in front of them. Miss Janowitz scowled at them. She always scowled at Seth, and J.J. would be guilty by association. After about five minutes, J.J. poked Seth in the arm. I’m bored, he said, in Seth’s head. Seth, lacking the capacity to speak back (J.J. was the transmitter in their psychic setup), nodded. Me too. On his notebook, he scribbled, Honors? J.J. nodded. At least they could endure the torture as a unit. The morning blurred by. In American History, Mr. Talbot, a bow-tied British expat, welcomed J.J. to the class without making him introduce himself. Mrs. Clark, their ancient Geometry teacher, scrawled her signature on J.J.’s registration slip, handed him a midterm exam along with the rest of the class, and promptly fell asleep at her desk. Because they were Honors students, nobody cheated. J.J. finished ahead of everyone and stared out the window at the puffy clouds layering over the river. Musing on Ben’s mysterious phone call, Seth suspected. As was he. He hoped his old Papa Bear wasn’t in trouble. But this was Ben they were talking about. He knew how to look after himself. When the bell released them for lunch at last, Seth caught up to J.J. in the hall. “Where did you learn math?” he asked. 61 “Xanthe.” Hands in the pockets of his leather jacket, J.J. was surveying the throngs of students with the vigilance of a predator scouting its next meal. “Gen-0 know geometry?” Seth said, surprised. “Xanthe is a humanist.” J.J. picked up a tray and slipped into the lunch line. “Like Agathon. They have an interest in human culture. A reverence for it, you might say.” It was pizza day. Sadly, cafeteria pizza could not compete with MoJo’s. Seth took three slices anyway, and was reaching for a pudding cup when a bright flash brought his head around. Quinn O’Shea had sidled into line behind him, copper hair spilling out from under her blue UA beanie. “Sullivan,” she said. “O’Shea,” Seth said back, nodding to the pack of sport-o girls grouped up behind her. Quinn was captain of the girls’ basketball team. Being human, she hadn’t had to hide out at Fairfax High like the rest of the Haven kids, who never joined teams, started clubs, or ran for class office. Angelo Alfaro could have played circles around Cam Foss, but he had grown up Underground, and in the Underground, anonymity equaled survival. “Been practicing up for your big game against Sacred Heart?” Quinn asked slyly. She was, of course, referencing the Knights’ near-win over the Warriors a couple of weeks ago. A win that could partially be attributed to one of Vixen O’Shea’s foxy plays, which she had generously shared, for the sole purpose of rubbing it in later. “Sure have,” Seth said. “You better. The Warriors are practically undefeated.” “I don’t think ‘practically’ counts.” Up until then, J.J. had seemed to be completely ignoring their conversation. Quinn’s gaze flicked to him, coolly amused. J.J. appraised her right back, every inch the cool cat in his leather jacket and ripped jeans. He and Quinn had met, but Quinn wasn’t Resistance, and J.J. had yet to show the slightest interest in anything in Fairfax unrelated to the Resistance. “What position do you play?” Quinn asked. The basketball girls smirked at one another, like they had seen their alpha eat boys for lunch before. “He’s not on the team,” Seth answered, before J.J. could. 62 “I didn’t think so.” Quinn’s tone was dismissive. Notoriously, no one outside the jock-sphere registered for her. “I’m not on the team,” J.J. said. “Doesn’t mean I don’t play.” The girls whooped. Quinn’s haughty smile faltered for barely a second. Snatching a napkin off the counter, she produced a pen from the pocket of her fleece pants and scribbled on it. Seven digits. Her phone number. “Here you go, player,” she said, offering it to J.J. like a gauntlet being thrown down. J.J. took it and stuffed it in his pocket without looking at it. A response guaranteed to have Quinn O’Shea waiting by the phone. “Come on, Casanova,” Seth muttered, shooting a dark look at Quinn over his shoulder as he drug J.J. away. He didn’t care if Quinn was gorgeous and witty and brave. If J.J. got his flirt on with anybody, Seth wanted it to be with Cleo. “Don’t you sit with them?” J.J. asked, twisting around to watch Quinn plop her tray down with the other Haven kids. The table looked empty without Alfaro there, taking up more space than should have been allowed. He had been badly burned by silver powder during the Fort King battle, and was being kept home to recover. “Not all the time,” Seth said, somewhat defensively. He wasn’t a snob or anything. At school, he just ran with a different crowd. He led J.J. over to Marshall’s pack. Besides Bryce, there were the Knights’ forwards, gangly Gabe Cochran and dark-skinned Topher Simmons, and Cam Foss, the other guard. Cam was Seth’s height, five-nine, but seriously bulked up from weight-lifting. His blonde hair was gelled in a messy bed-head style, his arm permanently glued to the shoulders of his cheerleader girlfriend, Shanti Bruce. Whitney had saved the boys seats beside her, across from Marshall. Seth’s twin and boyfriend nodded to one another. Seth sensed a conflict in the making. J.J. and Marshall were both accustomed to being pack alphas. “’Sup, kitty-cat?” Cam drawled. “Leigh told us you wiped out on your big bad motorcycle. I thought cats always landed on their feet.” 63 “I have a scar,” Seth announced, so of course everyone wanted to see. They clustered around him as he hiked up his shirt. Marshall kept his eyes on his tray. “You gonna be up for Friday night, Philly?” Topher asked. “You betcha,” Seth said. “I’m ready to bring it.” Bryce wolfhowled. Seth introduced J.J. to the table as his cousin. J.J., after a polite hello, lapsed into silence, as removed from the talk of homework and basketball and prom as if they had been discussing nuclear fission. “So Townsend,” Gabe said, popping a pepperoni in his mouth. “You think you’ll be ungrounded in time for graduation?” Marshall tipped back in his chair. His black dress shirt was unbuttoned over his white T-shirt, and Seth had a very sudden, very vivid image of Marshall with no shirt on. “Doubtful,” Marshall admitted. “What I want to know,” said Cam, “is what you were doing, staying out all night. Or who, I should say.” Marshall blushed, which instigated a chorus of, “Townsend, you dog,” and, “Tell us, Marshall, tell us!” Marshall laughed and shook his head, blushing deeper. His foot bumped Seth’s under the table. Seth bumped him back, both of them grinning into their sodas. The teasing was good-natured, on everyone’s part but Cam’s. “I’ll bet kitty-cat knows,” he wheedled. “C’mon, Sullivan. Tell us what hot little minx Townsend was pounding last week.” “A gentleman doesn’t kiss and tell, Cam,” Whitney said. “Not that we’d expect you to know that.” It was the first time Seth had ever heard Whitney say two words around Marshall’s friends, and certainly the first time she had ever stood up to Cam Foss. He saw Leigh’s eyes widen in astonishment. Leigh would never have rocked the boat with this crowd. Cam fired a filthy look at Whitney, but even he wasn’t stupid enough to pick on Marshall’s sister. Their alpha would drop him for that. Instead, he switched targets. Jerking his chin at J.J., he said, “What’s your story, tomcat?” The table got quiet. At first, Seth wasn’t sure J.J. had heard: He swigged his Cherry Coke, screwed the cap back on the bottle, and set it on the table, letting the silence stretch into awkwardness 64 before lifting his golden eyes to Cam’s. Then he smiled, in a deliberate fashion that showed his teeth. The noise J.J.’s chair made as he scraped it back seemed very loud in the silence. “Seth,” he said, “I’m taking off, if you want to come.” Taking off? What was he talking about, taking off? Seth hopped up, loping after his twin across the cafeteria. “J.J., we can’t just leave!” he hissed. “We have afternoon classes!” “What are they going to do, collar us?” J.J. pitched his trash into the bin outside the door and leaned back against a poster exhorting them to practice PMA, Positive Mental Attitude! “Let’s go to Fort King. There’s a strand of woods between here and there. We can run the whole way. You can meet Xanthe, we can ask McLain what was up with that phone call, and then we’ll go to Cleo’s to train.” Focus on what we should be focusing on. The war. He didn’t say it, but Seth heard it. He scuffed his shoe on the tile floor, miserably torn. He wanted to stay at school, and he wanted to go with J.J. “Please stick it out,” he pleaded. “It gets better. I hated school too, at first – ” “J.J. Sullivan.” Seth turned. Leigh was stalking toward them, hands on her hips. She looked remarkably like Lydia when she did that. “Seth is not cutting class. If he gets detention, Coach will bench him, and the team is counting on him.” She linked her arm through Seth’s. “Come on, Seth. You don’t have to do whatever J.J. does.” “Of course he doesn’t.” J.J.’s tone was as calm as his flat metallic eyes. He pushed off the wall, waving aside Seth’s protest. “It’s cool, little brother. I’ll see you tonight.” Leigh hauled on Seth’s arm, forcibly dragging him back inside the cafeteria as J.J. disappeared around the corner. Forget ping pong, Seth thought wearily. He was the rope in a tug of war. 65 Chapter Six: Mea Culpa After ball practice that evening, as Seth waited on the bleachers for Marshall to finish up a top-secret sectionals strategy session with Coach Evans, he used his new cell phone to call Cleo’s. She answered on the third ring, yelling at someone in the background, “If you track mud all over the place again, I am wiping it up with your hide!” “I take it J.J. is there,” Seth said. “He is,” said Cleo. “And he’s in a snit.” J.J. roared indignantly in the background. Seth leaned back on the bleacher, gazing up at the stars visible through the skylight. The gym’s walls were glass, too, darkly tinted. Through them he could see the headlights of cars passing on the expressway. All afternoon, Seth had fretted about J.J. He had spent study hall with his eyes closed, trying to project his consciousness across the ether to his twin’s, but either he had no telepathic abilities whatsoever or J.J. was not in the mood to share his thoughts. Seth was fretting about Ben, too. They are coming for you. He repeated the cryptic message for Cleo, and she relayed that she and J.J. had already discussed Ben’s call with Melody and McLain, hinting that they knew where Ben was calling from, but apparently Seth did not have clearance to know that. As for the name Caroline, McLain had promised to look into it, she said. Leaving them back at square one – namely, waiting for Ben to call back. Seth crooked an arm behind his head, wincing at a slight twinge in his scar. “Did J.J. say anything about school?” Cleo repeated a few of J.J.’s more colorful phrases to describe the American education system. “I don’t think he plans on going back,” she added, in confidential tones. Their mother would be so pleased. “I gotta go,” Seth said, for Marshall, grinning broadly, had just backed out of Coach’s office. “Call you later?” “Anytime, sweetheart,” Cleo said. Coach had worked them hard at practice, and Marshall had changed into street clothes without showering; a circle of sweat 66 darkened the back of his dress shirt, and his hair was damp at the temples, curling onto his flushed cheeks. Seth was glad the gym was empty so he could ogle him openly, as opposed to covertly, which he did all the time. Marshall Townsend was six-two and slender, all long lines and thin bones. As he passed the hoop he grabbed a ball off the sidelines and fired off a jump shot – popping up on his toes, spine arched, wrist curved as he followed through, graceful as a Cihuly glass sculpture. He turned to Seth, still wearing that zany grin, and the thought hit Seth like a freight train on overdrive: I am in love with this man. “Sorry to keep you waiting, Philadelphia,” Marshall said. Seth managed a nod. He fell into step beside Marshall as they left the gym, backpacks slung over their shoulders. A gust of cold wind greeted them in the parking lot; Marshall pulled in a deep breath, releasing it on a satisfied sigh. Seth nudged him with a hip. “What’s got you in such a good mood?” “Oh, nothing, really. Just that Coach talked to the scout from Duke.” Marshall paused, drawing out the suspense. Cruel, really, given that Seth was a cat, and prone to terrible curiosity. “He’s going to come to the game Friday night, to see me play.” “Indiana, that is awesome!” Marshall ducked his head, unable to rein in his cheek-stretching grin. Duke was Number One on his Top Five list of pre-med programs. “You must be so psyched.” “My father will be ecstatic.” Marshall unlocked the Audi. The silver sports car was the only vehicle left in the lot, other than a black sedan parked in one of the teacher’s spots. Seth’s keen eyes could just make out someone sitting behind the wheel. “I might swing by the hospital before we head home, tell him in person. Would you mind?” “Actually,” Seth said, “I was wondering if you could drop me off at Jack’s office.” Marshall looked up sharply. The key waited in the ignition, but he made no move to turn it over. “Is that safe?” “Safe as anything I do,” said Seth. Marshall didn’t look like that had sold him on the concept. “Relax, Indiana. Jack doesn’t have any reason to collar me now. Lydia and Leigh are under McLain’s protection, and so is he. But enough about me,” he said, 67 still smarting a bit from the center-of-the-universe comment. “Duke. Athletic scholarship. This is big time.” “It hasn’t happened yet,” Marshall cautioned. “It will.” Leaning across the seat, Seth kissed Marshall’s cheek – mindful that they were in the school parking lot, and anyone could be watching. To his pleasant surprise, Marshall cupped his chin and kissed him on the lips. “I still have to graduate high school,” he murmured, grazing his nose along Seth’s jaw. “I could blow out a knee in the postseason – ” his teeth caught Seth’s earlobe – “fail Advanced Chem. – ” he kissed that shivery spot below Seth’s ear – “be turned into a human guinea pig by Chimera…” “That,” growled Seth, “is not funny.” Marshall kissed the tip of his nose. “It was a little funny,” he said. As they hit the expressway, Seth called his house and left a message for Lydia saying he was grabbing a bite with Marshall. (He did not mention Jack.) To make that less of a lie, and because Seth was starving, they hit a McDonald’s drive-through on their way downtown. Traffic was light. Marshall cranked Weezer on the stereo and they talked basketball, sharing extra-large fries and sipping chocolate shakes. “It occurs to me,” Seth said, as Marshall braked for a yellow light Seth would totally have punched through on his Yamaha, “that we haven’t done this much.” “Ride in my car?” Marshall said. “Go out,” Seth clarified. “Are you trying to say I never take you anywhere, Philadelphia?” “I’m just a booty call to you, Indiana, admit it.” Marshall flipped him off. Seth grinned. He could see his reflection in the dark glass over Marshall’s shoulder. It surprised him how sharp his cheekbones looked. Could he be losing weight? Seth ate everything in his path. “I mean it, though,” he said, as the light turned green and Marshall tapped the accelerator. “Once you’re ungrounded, we should do something besides basketball or video games.” “Like what?” 68 “I don’t know. See a movie. Get coffee. Date stuff.” Seth glanced at his boyfriend. “Unless you think people will talk.” “As you saw at lunch today,” said Marshall, wiping salty fingers on his designer jeans, “people are already talking.” Seth bit his lip. “Does that bother you?” “Not as much as I thought it would,” Marshall said. Hey, it was progress. “Although, that scene with your brother and Cam today, that was kind of intense. I thought J.J. was going to jump across the table and eat him.” They had reached Court Street. Most of the offices were closed for the evening. Marshall parked along the curb in front of the Sacred Heart Academy. Seth chewed on the end of his straw. “J.J. has been through a lot, okay? Cut him some slack.” “I am cutting him slack, Seth,” Marshall said, patiently. “But does he have to be so…I don’t know, so – scary?” “We’re jaguars,” Seth said. “We’re scary. And Cam, in case you missed the memo, is an asswipe. Since he’s your friend, maybe you should talk to him about that.” Marshall rolled his eyes. “Whatever. Are we going inside?” “I’m going inside,” Seth returned, snippily. Didn’t Marshall understand how hard it was to adjust to the human world when you had never lived in it? Seth still struggled, and he had grown up Underground, not closeted in a Chimera lab like J.J., learning to kill people with his bare hands. “You’re grounded, remember? You should get going before you lose your car privileges again.” He climbed out. So did Marshall, scanning the dark windows. “Are you sure he’s here?” “The apartment is around back.” Seth knew he sounded stiff, and forced himself to take a breath. “Look, I’m sorry I bit your head off about Cam. Okay?” “Is this your way of telling me to get lost?” Marshall said. Seth sighed. “I’m not trying to fight with you, Indiana. But this thing with Jack, it’s – personal. About my dad.” “So I’ll wait in the lobby. I have reading material.” Marshall patted his backpack. The grimoire Agathon had loaned him was peeking out of the top. Seth folded his arms. “Let me get this straight. I’m not allowed to be protective of you, but you’re allowed to be protective of me?” He shook his head. “We call that a double standard, Indiana.” 69 Marshall stepped up on the sidewalk. “I’ll make you a deal,” he said. “After you sit by my bedside for a day, praying I don’t die, you can be as protective of me as you want.” *** Jack Steward answered the door in jeans and a paint-spackled work shirt. He did not seem surprised to see his step-son and former next-door-neighbor on his doorstep. “I just ordered Chinese,” he said, holding the door open with the hand that wasn’t in a sling. “If you boys are hungry.” Seth was always hungry. Fresh coats of paint glistened on the walls in the apartment’s entryway. Seth didn’t know what he had been expecting, but the apartment wasn’t it. A wooden staircase in the living room circled up to a second unfinished bedroom with a private bath; there was a fireplace, a granite-topped bar separating the kitchen from the living room, a Whirlpool in the master bath. The floors were cherry-stained hardwood, the windows, like the doorways, arched. Every room had a spectacular view of the nighttime river. Jack’s new furniture must have just been delivered. A mattress was propped against the wall in the bedroom, still in the plastic, couch cushions stacked by the fireplace. After a quick tour, they fixed their plates at the bar and took seats in the living room, Jack in his recliner, Marshall and Seth on the floor with their backs against the sofa. “How’s your mother?” Jack asked. “Stressed,” Seth answered, honestly. “And Leigh?” “She’s good.” That was less honest, but Jack looked a bit stressed himself. The shadows under his eyes were like bruises. “Her animal dissection petition goes before the school board next week. Guess you’ll see her there,” Seth said. Jack, like Marshall’s father, was a school board member. “And you?” Jack forked up some noodles one-handed. “How are you?” “I am fantastic,” Seth said. “Thanks for asking.” Like Jack cared how he was. 70 Marshall nibbled his egg roll, looking awkward. The Townsends and Stewards had been neighbors all of his life; Seth could see Marshall’s former regard for Jack battling with his desire to punch him in the face. The situation was equally strained for Seth, though for different reasons. In their last extended conversation, Jack had confessed his role in the plot to hand Seth over to LeRoi. You aren’t anyone to me, he had said. You aren’t my child. Coincidentally, that was the reason for Seth’s visit. He put his plate down on the floor. “I wanted to ask you about my dad,” he said. Jack did not seem fazed. “I thought you might.” Marshall rose. “I’ll wait for you downstairs,” he said. Seth almost asked him to stay. He didn’t fear Jack. Jack he could have chomped into kibble. But asking the questions he needed to ask would make him vulnerable on a whole other level, like he was opening a vein and bleeding onto his step-father’s new sofa. Puzzling over the mystery of the Black Swan’s parentage had reiterated to Seth how scanty his knowledge of his own werekin heritage was. All he knew about Thomas Sullivan was that he had been born and raised in captivity, and that when he had come of age at seventeen, Chimera Enterprises had paid for his education and permitted him to live in the human world, provided he told no one who and what he was and that, if he ever had a child, he register that child with Chimera as soon as he or she skinned. This was how Thomas had ended up in the Underground. He had not wanted his sons, warrior breeds, to be brought up in the Scholae Bestiarii, where werekin were turned into killers. He had not wanted Ursula LeRoi to add their blood, the blood of the Jaguar Clan, to the Ark. Seth wanted to know who his father’s parents were. Whether Thomas had brothers and sisters. Lydia could have answered those questions, but Seth didn’t like to bring up painful subjects to her, and her late husband was a painful subject. It was also possible she wouldn’t know. It was possible Thomas hadn’t known; he could have been taken from his parents in infancy, raised apart from them in the Scholae Bestiarii. Jack, as a former Chimera agent, 71 might know, or be able to use his connections inside Operation Swan Song to find out. The outer door closed behind Marshall with a click. Jack retrieved a bottle of Amber Bock from the fridge, dropped his sling on the counter, and returned to his recliner, holding the beer bottle in both hands. “I know very little about Tommy’s past, you understand. Those records were kept by LeRoi. I didn’t have access to them. All I know is what he told me – that his mother passed away when he was born, and he never knew his father. I couldn’t tell you if that was true, but it’s not uncommon for werekin to be orphaned young, as you are well aware. His story when we met at Georgetown was that he had been raised by relatives, and his mother had set up a trust fund for him to attend college.” “What about Regent? Didn’t Dad tell him about his past?” Really, that was what Seth had been banking on – Thomas opening up to Regent, Regent having reported back to Jack, his partner in Thomas’ betrayal. “If he did, Werner never told me.” Jack took a long pull from his beer and placed it on a corner of the hearth, leaning forward with his injured arm cradled against his chest. The shadows under his eyes made them look like they were being absorbed into his skull. “Seth, when I first met Werner and Tommy, I didn’t know they were werekin. I didn’t know werekin existed. I grew up just like Leigh, never knowing my father worked for Project Ark.” Seth met Jack’s gaze coldly. “I didn’t come here to listen to excuses, Jack.” “And I won’t offer you any. There is no excuse for what I’ve done. But I would like to offer an explanation, if you’re willing to hear me out.” The baldness of the reply undercut Seth’s anger. After a moment, partly out of curiosity, partly out of something else he couldn’t even name, he shrugged his consent. Jack took a breath. “When I started law school, I had no idea Werner Regent had been tasked to befriend me, to bring me into Chimera’s fold,” he said. “I had no idea my father was a Partner in Chimera Enterprises. I had no idea he was betraying them to the Resistance.” 72 Bullshit, Seth wanted to cough. Except…Emery Little’s dad, Aidan McDonagh, had arrived in Fairfax seventeen years ago on reports that the Ark was being housed at Fort King. Shortly thereafter, Gavin Steward had keeled over from a heart attack. Coincidence? Seth did not believe in those. And it made sense. If Jack’s father had taken the intel on the Ark to the Resistance, and LeRoi had found him out, he would have needed to be dealt with. But a senator in her pocket, particularly a senator from Fairfax, would have been a hard asset to give up, without someone picked out to replace him. “What does that have to do with my parents?” he demanded. “The summer before our last year of law school, Tommy and Werner came here with me, to clerk in my father’s law office. That was when your parents met. I was thrilled for Tommy. We had already talked about going into practice together, just the three of us, the top three in our class. After my father died, not long after we returned to school, Tommy and Lydia got engaged, and we agreed to take over my father’s practice. It seemed…” “Foolproof,” Seth supplied softly, hearing Regent: Three best friends in our pal Jackie’s hometown. Tommy and I thought it would be a foolproof plan for our futures. “Yes.” Jack seemed satisfied by the word. “Foolproof. It was only later that I found out the truth, only later that Ursula LeRoi came to me and told me what Tommy and Regent were, and that with my father gone, a spot had opened up for me to join the Partners. She was frustrated with the progress she was making in D.C. on Project Ark. She wanted politicians loyal to her to smooth the waters on Capitol Hill, secure funding for her more questionable experiments. And I thought, why not? Why shouldn’t I have privilege and wealth and influence? Tommy was a registered werekin in good standing with Chimera. So was Regent. LeRoi had no reason to hurt them. I wasn’t betraying them.” Jack shook his head. “That was how I justified it to myself, but the truth is, I was young, I was ambitious, and I was naïve. I didn’t understand…I thought I would just be pushing paper.” He broke off, but Seth hardly needed him to say more. He had seen the cellblock inside Fort King. Seen his kindred collared, awaiting shipment to Chimera’s other facilities, to be trained as killers, or experimented on like lab rats, or bred like livestock. 73 Someone had helped arrange all of that. Likely someone local, on the ground. “Are you trying to tell me you’ve been working for the Resistance all along?” Seth said. “I wish I could tell you that. I wish I’d had the courage to do what my father did, once Elijah Bishop was dead and Ursula LeRoi was left in control. Once he realized what he had really involved himself in, and that it was not saving the world.” Jack scraped his fingers down his cheeks, leaving white lines like claw marks that faded away slowly. “Even after I knew LeRoi meant to collar Tommy and take his sons, I said nothing. I did nothing. I told myself there was nothing I could do, but that was just because I was too cowardly to do the right thing and warn my friend. “The night the hunters came for you and J.J., I was outside. I took Lydia away. I convinced LeRoi to alter her memories, leave her with me. I married her to save her life, that was the only reason. I was never – She was Tommy’s wife, I had never thought of her in that way. I just wanted her to be safe, and happy. I thought if she had another child right away, she might – and you have to understand, Seth, I was very young back then – I thought it might make up for losing you, and J.J.” Jack looked down at his toes. “So then what?” Seth’s mouth tasted bitter; the words came out equally so. “You just decided she was happier being lied to? Believing she had let one son die and didn’t deserve to ever have the other back?” “No. I wanted to tell her the truth. So many times, I wanted to tell her everything. But we had Leigh,” Jack said, simply. “The second I held my baby girl, I was in love with her. And I knew if I betrayed Chimera, LeRoi would hurt her, to get to me. “Then you called.” Jack raised his eyes to Seth’s. They were the color of slate. “You sounded so desperate, saying you needed a place to stay. I knew something terrible must have happened. I wanted to tell you no, stay away, you wouldn’t be safe here, but you called on our home line. Chimera was listening to every word. I knew they would be waiting for you when you showed up here. I knew LeRoi would be watching me, to make sure I didn’t warn you, and if I did – Seth, don’t you see? It wasn’t about me anymore. I had to choose, between you and my own daughter.” 74 Jack spread his hands, helplessly. “I was as trapped as if I had a collar around my neck.” “No, Jack,” Seth said. “You were never that trapped.” For a long minute, they just looked at one another. Seth could hear a clock ticking somewhere, and his own heart beating steadily in his ears. Finally, Jack leaned back in his recliner, picked up his beer, and raised it, as though making a toast. “No,” he said. “I suppose I never was.” 75 Chapter Seven: Bleeding Hearts Seth didn’t say much on the drive home. Marshall cranked the stereo, and he laid his head back on the seat, watching the stars whip by and wondering if the Totems were up there, looking down on him. Jack had offered to delve into Thomas Sullivan’s past. He had access to most of Chimera’s records through Operation Swan Song, though Dre might first have to decode the encrypted files no one had yet been able to hack into. Seth had left his cell phone number so Jack could reach him directly once he found something. For the time being, Seth wanted their meeting kept secret from Lydia. Like until he had graduated from high school and moved out. Dr. Townsend’s Lexus was not in the garage when they got home. Marshall walked Seth to his back door, stretching the night out just a little longer. He whistled at the aftermath of Captain Hook’s resurrection. “Lucky he was a small dog. If you’d been raising a Rottweiler, you might have destroyed the whole house.” “You know what they say,” said Seth. “It’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog.” He hopped up on the stoop. For once, this put him at eye level with Marshall. Wrapping his arms around Marshall’s neck, he sighed dramatically. “Good night, good night. Parting is such sweet sorrow – ” “Okay, Juliet.” Marshall pulled him in for a good night kiss. His cheeks were cold, his mouth warm; the contrast made Seth shiver. “I’m glad for you, Indiana,” he whispered. “About the college thing. I hope it all works out like you want.” He was close enough to feel the tremor that passed through Marshall. He rocked back on his heels. Seth had seen Marshall furious, terrified, brooding – never tearful. It scared him more than any hunter ever had. “Marshall, hey,” he said, softly. “Tell me what’s going on.” 76 “It’s stupid.” Marshall’s voice shook. He looked away, working his bottom lip between his teeth. “You know…you know how last night, you asked me…you asked why I was so…” “Horny?” Seth suggested. “Let’s say passionate,” Marshall said. “It was this dream I had. About you and me.” “Oh? Do tell.” Seth wiggled his eyebrows. Marshall shook his head, color inching up his neck. Seth leaned back against the porch railing and looked up at him. “Why not? You think I don’t dream about you?” “You do?” Marshall sounded genuinely surprised. “Of course I dream about you, idiot,” Seth said. But the dream that swam up before his eyes was Marshall shackled to a rock, disappearing as the glowing orb rose into the stars and the werekin motherland rose from the depths. He blinked it away. “But we were talking about your dream, remember?” “It wasn’t even that kind of dream,” Marshall said. “It was more, I don’t know. Freaky.” “Uh-huh. Go on.” “Jesus, Philadelphia.” Marshall blushed for real then. “Not like that.” He sat down on the step, propped his elbows on his knees, and linked his fingers together, resting his forehead against them with his eyes closed. Seth, after a moment, sat down beside him. “Do you ever think about the future?” Marshall asked. He said “the future” with a capital T and a capital F: The Future. A topic Seth’s Fairfax High classmates were obsessed with. Where will I go to college? Who will I marry? How many kids will I have? Growing up Underground, Seth’s thoughts on The Future had stopped at waking up the next day. Each day had carried with it the possibility of being collared or killed. That possibility still existed. Was, in fact, more of a probability, now that LeRoi knew his identity. But Underground, there had been no real future to think of. No high school graduation to plan for, no college applications to submit. On the rare occasions he had thought ahead to what his life would be like at twenty, or optimistically, thirty, Seth had seen himself at best a hardened Resistance fighter, at worst a petty criminal. 77 Now he played on a ball team. Studied genetics and Shakespeare. Was gainfully employed. So yeah, Seth had started to think about The Future. “Sometimes,” he said. “Did you have a dream about your future?” And was I in it? “Sort of,” Marshall said. “Gee, Indiana, don’t overwhelm me with the details.” “I dreamed that I died.” A white haze blurred Seth’s vision. It took him a moment to realize he had stopped breathing. “How?” he whispered. “I don’t know.” Marshall’s fingers were clenched so tight Seth feared his knuckles might break the skin. “In the dream, I was already dead, and you were holding me, and crying, and I wanted to tell you not to. That this was something…This was something I had chosen.” Seth felt cold all over. Werekin didn’t get cold, thanks to the magic in their blood. He pushed his hands into his armpits. “Indiana, if you’re thinking like that, you need to talk to somebody. Coach, maybe. Or my mom. Your father, even.” “See why I didn’t want to tell you? I knew you’d think I’m suicidal, and I’m not.” Marshall lowered his hands from his face. His complexion had turned ashy gray. “I’m not saying I never think about it. I’m sure everybody thinks about it.” Seth didn’t. Seth liked being alive. Very, very much. “But this dream, it made me realize there are things I want, now, and – ” Headlight scraped up the Townsends’ drive. Marshall jumped up. His father’s Lexus rolled to a stop, the driver’s side door opening immediately; the silhouette cast by the headlights was so similar to Marshall’s Seth would not have believed it wasn’t his if Marshall had not been standing right in front of him. He had always found the resemblance between Wesley Townsend and his only son uncanny. “I’m not supposed to be over here,” Marshall muttered, half to himself. He looked up at Seth. “Don’t tell anybody about this, okay? Promise?” Marshall was exacting a lot of vows of silence from him lately, Seth thought, and he was not convinced this was a secret he should keep. He was not convinced of that at all. But Marshall’s baby blues were pleading, and Seth told himself they would figure this out, whatever this was, together. “Okay,” he said. “I promise.” 78 *** Not often was Seth awakened by screams. He sat bolt upright, heart pounding. His alarm had not yet buzzed; it was 5:52a.m. Throwing off the covers, he bolted into the hallway, where he collided with Leigh, who was scurrying out of her room with her robe open over her pink-heart pajamas. “Did you tell Mom about J.J. skipping school?” Seth hissed at her. “Are you nuts?” Leigh hissed back. “If Mom is pissed, it makes life harder for all of us.” The shouting reached eardrum-vibrating decibels as they descended the steps. Captain Hook was cowering behind the umbrella stand in the entryway, tail between his legs. He whined, as if to say, This is bad, guys. It certainly seemed to be. In the kitchen, J.J. was braced against the wall, firing-squad style; leaves were caught in his hair, plastered to the soles of his muddy bare feet, his black T-shirt damp across the back. Lydia, by the sink, was brandishing a spatula as though she meant to brain him with it. “And then,” she ranted, “and then, I call Cleo, and she tells me you left her house at midnight, so she has no idea where you are!” “I told you.” J.J.’s tone was tightly controlled. “I went for a run. What’s the problem? Seth goes for runs.” “Seth leaves notes! Seth calls and tells me where he’s going to be! Seth,” Lydia hauled in a breath for her big finale, “does not cut class in the middle of the day!” “Crap,” Leigh muttered. J.J. sent her a suspicious glare. “How did you find out about that?” “Because I am your mother, Jeremy Sullivan, and when you disappear from school grounds, your principal calls me. Then I get to worry that you’re collared in a cage somewhere, until you decide to waltz in here, twelve hours later, looking like – like – ” She gestured helplessly at J.J.’s disheveled appearance. “Like something the cat dragged in?” purred Leigh. “Adleigh Jean, do not start with me this morning.” Lydia dropped the spatula in the sink. Her face was haggard with fatigue; she must have been up all night, waiting for J.J. to come home. Seth had noticed her bedroom light on later than usual, but had 79 assumed she was absorbed in a good book. The two of them had that tendency in common. As J.J. was examining the mud between his toes, Seth intervened. “Mom, J.J. had a good reason for cutting class,” he said, and explained about Ben’s phone call, playing it off as though J.J. had been compelled to choose between school and the Resistance. “Seth couldn’t go, Mom,” chimed in Leigh, cottoning on to his strategy. “He would have gotten detention, and you know how Coach feels about detention.” She moved to stand next to Seth, the three of them presenting a united front of teenage innocence. J.J., still studying his toes, did not join in the deception, but nor, Seth noticed, did he contradict them. Lying to your parents. Source of bonding for siblings of all species. Lydia scowled at them. But after a moment, she relented. “Well, if it was for the Resistance, I suppose I can write you a note for school,” she said, adding, “But just this once. In the future, you are not to leave school without Ms. McLain’s permission. Understood?” “About that,” J.J. said. Seth grabbed his elbow. “He can shower in my room,” he said. To J.J., he hissed, “Not another word.” He dragged his twin up the stairs, dogged by Captain Hook. They did not speak again until they were closeted in Seth’s bathroom, where J.J. began stripping off his muddy clothes. Seth climbed onto the edge of the sink. “I know what you’re going to say,” J.J. said. “You want me to go back to school.” “No,” Seth said. “That’s not what I’m going to say. I’m going to say that our mom is having a tough time right now, and maybe that doesn’t matter to you, but it matters to me.” In the mirror, he saw J.J. glance at him before pulling the shower curtain closed. “It matters to me,” he said. At least Seth thought he did; the water came on at that moment, so it was hard to say for sure. “I just don’t get why she was so mad.” “She wasn’t mad, J.J. She was scared. You heard her. She thought you were dead.” 80 “She thought I was dead for seventeen years,” J.J. said. “Shouldn’t be that much of an adjustment.” Sighing, Seth traced glyphs on the steamed-up mirror – symbols from the grimoire. The spells were stuck in his head like song lyrics. He wiped them away with his wrist, noticing, as he did, that his cheekbones were definitely more prominent than they had been a week ago. He was losing weight. Must have been all the basketball and karate. Jaguars did require substantial amounts of protein, and it wasn’t easy to come by cheesesteaks with Leigh’s tofu and soy milk diet. “She kept our baby things, you know,” he said. “In a box downstairs. Our teddy bears. Locks of our hair.” “I know. Poe told me.” The water shut off. Seth tossed J.J. a towel; he fluffed it through his blonde hair, standing it up in the back, and tossed it back at him. It was times like these Seth remembered that J.J. was his age, only seventeen. Easy to forget even though they were twins. “And she’ll be happier, if I go to school?” “Yes,” Seth said. “She’ll be happier.” J.J. muttered a curse in Lemurian. Seth hadn’t even known there were curses in Lemurian. “Fine,” he said. “If it’s that important to everybody, I’ll go to school.” *** I will wear my heart upon my sleeve for daws to peck at: I am not what I am. That was the quotation Miss Janowitz had written on the board in their English classroom. Dropping his backpack on the floor in the back row next to J.J.’s, Seth groaned inwardly. Fabulous. A discussion day. On the plus side, it would be easy to nod off. Miss Janowitz wouldn’t call on him even if he volunteered. Tipping his head back, Seth started counting ceiling tiles. A talon-like fingernail tapped the board. “Okay, class,” Miss Janowitz said. Her skirt was plaid today, her sweater mochabrown. Bryce hadn’t stopped staring at her chest for twenty minutes. “Who can tell me what Shakespeare is trying to convey about Iago in this quotation?” “That he’s a traitor.” 81 Chair legs squeaked. Everyone in the room had turned to gawk at the back row. Seth was too shocked that J.J. had spoken in class to do more than stare right along with them. “Dude,” Bryce whispered. “You have to raise your hand!” J.J. looked mystified. “Why?” “I’ll repeat the question,” Miss Janowitz said, primly. “What is Shakespeare trying to convey about Iago in this quotation?” Dutifully raising his hand, J.J. said, more loudly, “It means Iago is a traitor.” Yeah, he wasn’t getting the concept of raising your hand. “He’s saying he’ll pretend loyalty to Othello’s face, because if he were to show his true feelings – wear his heart on his sleeve – Othello would know how much Iago despises him. But what he pretends to be, he isn’t, and so you have the last line: ‘I am not what I am.’” During this rather eloquent bit of interpretation, Miss Janowitz had been sizing J.J. up as though deciding what would more effectively shut him up: being ignored, or receiving detention. With one finger, she beckoned imperiously to him. “A word, if you please, Jeremy.” J.J. rose and padded obligingly up the aisle, stopping in front of Miss Janowitz’s podium. He waited patiently while she wrote out a detention slip. Seth was painfully reminded of his dream-walk – a collared J.J. standing before Ursula LeRoi, forced into obsequious submission. His fingers curled in toward his palms, sharp nails pricking the skin. Miss Janowitz handed him the slip, and J.J. loped back to his seat. He held the paper out to Seth, reaching over to poke him on the arm. What does this mean? On his notebook, Seth wrote, Don’t talk in class. *** It turned out Seth and J.J. did not have the exact same schedule. J.J. was in first-period Chemistry, meaning he escaped the horridness of Dr. Gideon, and after lunch, he had Advanced French. Seth was in Señor Vasquez’s Spanish class. “How can you be in Advanced French,” said Leigh, “when you don’t speak French?” 82 They were in the lunch line, choosing between meatloaf surprise and cardboard pizza. Seth had taken helpings of both, determined not to lose any more weight. All Leigh’s tray had on it was an apple and a Diet Coke. Fairfax High didn’t offer much in the way of a vegan-friendly menu. “Je parle français,” J.J. said, picking up an apple and cleaning it on his leather jacket. Leigh stared at him, and he smirked. “What? I never said I don’t speak French. Xanthe taught me.” Now Seth started. “The Gen-0s speak French?” “I told you, they’re humanists,” J.J. said. “Where else would I have learned it?” “From a book,” said Leigh. “Like Seth.” J.J. turned to Seth. Seth wondered if he knew there were still flecks of mud behind his ears. “You learned French from a book?” “Spanish and Italian, too,” Seth said. “And some Russian and Latin.” “Nerd,” said Leigh. “Hey, where are you going?” J.J., who had started away from them, nodded toward Emery’s table. “I’m sitting over here today,” he said, and walked off, sliding into the seat beside Quinn O’Shea, who promptly snapped the apple up off his tray and bit into it with a sly grin. Seth stood there, staring after his twin. “Come on,” Leigh said, quietly, and led him over to the ballplayers’ table. Marshall was his regular golden boy self at lunch, still hyped up over the Duke scout. His good mood carried over into Gym, his one and only class with Seth; even he and Cam were getting along, saying how cool it would be if they both ended up Blue Devils next year. Seeing Marshall so jazzed to play college ball, Seth found it easy to dismiss the implications of his dream. With sectionals staring them in the face, the only thing on Coach’s mind was basketball. He lined the class up on the sidelines and numbered them off into teams for scrimmage. J.J. leaned over to Seth. He was probably the only person alive who could make blue polyester shorts look menacing. “I asked Emery if he and some of the others wanted to drop by Cleo’s later to train with us. Is that okay?” “Sure.” Seth had seen Emery in battle. He was one kickass wererabbit. 83 J.J. picked up on the coolness of his tone. “Listen, I’m sorry I didn’t sit with you at – ” “Okay, ladies!” Coach blew his whistle. “Now get out there and show me what a championship team looks like!” This presented a problem, one Seth had been short-sighted not to anticipate. He trotted over to Coach, J.J. in tow. Coach scowled at them. His bald spot looked glazed in the light pouring through the gym’s skylight. “What’s the problem, Sullivans?” “Well Coach,” Seth said, “my, uh, my cousin doesn’t know the rules.” The whistle slipped out of Coach’s lips. “He doesn’t know how to play basketball? Where did he grow up, in a cave?” You know, Coach. In a top-secret military-controlled facility, training to be a super-soldier. “Connecticut,” Seth said. “Ah.” Coach nodded like that explained things. “All right. He can sit out today, but you bring him up to speed by tomorrow, Philly. Got it?” Seth saluted. Thus J.J. parked on the bleachers next to Bryce (whom he ignored) and tracked the game with his round golden eyes, elbows on his knees, his gaze never leaving the ball. Seth could imagine him in that jungle from his dreams, pacing through the treetops, high above an unsuspecting gazelle – Oomph! Air blasted out of Seth’s lungs. He staggered, holding his side; focused on J.J., he had not seen Cam swooping in to steal the ball. The elbow in the ribs had been unnecessary. Coach must have thought so, too. He blew his whistle, cheeks a livid purple. “Foul! Philly, get to the line. Foss, any more cheap shots like that and you’ll be riding the pine pony all the way to state. Got it?” “Sorry, Coach,” said Cam, who did not sound sorry. As he turned away, he made cat-claws at Seth. Whatever. The teams lined up, Seth at the free throw line, dribbling as he measured the shot. Sweat pebbled his forehead. From his spot under the basket, Marshall mouthed, Okay? Seth nodded. Currents of electricity were chasing along his scar, but he would not give Cam Foss the satisfaction of sidelining him. He made both free throws, and scrimmage resumed. The pain stayed with Seth through the game and down into the locker room. Turning his back on the other guys, who were 84 heckling each other like always, he eased his shirt up. His scar was as angry-red as it felt. A hand cupped his elbow. Expecting Marshall, Seth was surprised to find J.J. standing beside him. “You’re in pain,” he said. “It’s no big deal,” Seth started, but J.J. cut him off. “Yes it is,” he said. “I can feel it.” J.J. laid a hand on his own stomach. Seth recalled the blistering agony in his bones when Ursula LeRoi had used J.J.’s collar to drain his life-force. Shared pain. The downside of twin telepathy. “Aw, does it hurt, kitty-cat?” simpered Cam. He was across the locker room, stripped to his boxers – for someone with so many hang-ups about homosexuality, he certainly liked swaggering around half-naked, showing off his massive pecs. “Need a kiss to make it better?” He puckered up his lips, making exaggerated smooching noises. “Cam, lay off,” Marshall said tiredly, appearing beside Seth. “Are you – ” He stopped. Seth had tried to yank his shirt back down, but Marshall had seen the fiery line across his hipbones. He whirled. Cam had frozen beside his locker. Everything seemed to freeze – everything but Marshall, who walked, very calmly, yet also very purposefully, toward Cam. His spine was straighter than Seth had ever seen it. “Come on, Townsend.” Cam licked his lips, glancing around uncertainly. “I was just playing around. You can’t tell me Sullivan hasn’t been banged harder than that – ” Marshall punched him. Just raised his arm, drew back a fist, and wham, before anybody even understood what he meant to do. There was a crunching sound, bone striking bone; Cam slumped backwards, water streaming from his wide green eyes, blood gushing down his chin. He swayed, and would have fallen if Topher and Gabe hadn’t gripped him by the elbows, holding him upright – gaping openmouthed at Marshall, as was every other boy in the room. Seth could not move. It was like he had grown roots into the cement floor. 85 Cam cupped his hands over his broken nose. His expression was some combination of shocked and betrayed. “What the hell, Townsend?” he spat out, his voice snuffly. “I told you.” Marshall’s voice was so coldly ferocious Seth did not recognize it as his. “I told you to lay off. You touch Seth again, and I’ll kill you. You understand? I will kill you.” He never raised his voice, but there was no dismissing the threat as idle. Marshall meant every word. Cam stared at him. Seth didn’t know what he would have said, if he would have said anything at all, had the locker room door not slammed open, admitting Coach. He must have heard the commotion from his office. He looked from Marshall’s scraped knuckles to Cam’s bloody nose, and the vein in his forehead stood out like it might burst. “Simmons, Cochran, get Foss to the nurse,” he barked. “Townsend, my office. Right now, Captain.” Without a word, Marshall turned on his heel and stalked out. J.J. was smiling delightedly, like, Finally! Some bloodshed! Seth, on the other hand, felt his heart deflate like a balloon. Fighting meant detention. Detention meant being benched. And the scout from Duke was coming on Friday. 86 Chapter Eight: What Lies Beneath “Your scar shouldn’t be hurting like that,” J.J. said. Seth did not answer. From behind his closed office door, Coach’s voice rose, a garbled echo in the empty gym. The words “screw up” came through loud and clear, and Seth winced. “Seth, are you listening? We need to take you to Fort King, have Aphrodisia take a look at you.” Seth gave a noncommittal shrug. He was lying down on a bleacher, using his letterman’s jacket for a pillow, staring morosely up at the gym’s skylight. Clouds rolled like thin smoke across the setting sun. J.J. sat on the bleacher above his, twisting a thread off his T-shirt. The entire team had been marched to the main office, lined up in chairs beside the chrome counter, and called in one at a time to provide their statements to Ms. McLain. You would have thought Marshall had knifed somebody. To a man, every boy in the locker room would have lied, said Cam ran his face into a door; Marshall was their alpha, and Cam, they all agreed, had it coming. But Marshall, predictably, had vetoed the idea. The verdict? Three-day suspension. Effective tomorrow. Dr. Foss had already driven Cam to the E.R. for X-rays. Dr. Townsend had been called as well, but the nurse had said he was in surgery and could not be disturbed. While the rest of the team had glumly departed, J.J. and Seth had walked Marshall back to the gym, to meet with Coach. There was a bang inside Coach’s office now, like a fist slamming down on a table. Seth draped a forearm across his eyes. “Who’s Aphrodisia?” he asked. “A Gen-0, like Agathon and Xanthe,” J.J. said. “A good Healer.” Seth traced his scar through his shirt. The pain had subsided again. “Maybe I lost too much blood when LeRoi shot me,” he mused. “Maybe I’m not magical enough to regenerate anymore.” “I don’t think that’s possible. Anyway, I’ve seen werekin lose more blood than you did and still heal.” J.J. twisted the thread on his shirt so hard it snapped, just as something banged again in Coach’s office. His eyes were burning a dark, burnished bronze. “I 87 would have punched him,” he said, “but I didn’t think you wanted me to.” “I didn’t,” Seth said. He hadn’t wanted Marshall to punch Cam, either. But he had a sneaking suspicion Marshall’s issues with Cam ran deeper than Cam badgering his boyfriend. Bryce had once told him Marshall and Cam used to be real friends. Something had changed that. J.J. stretched the thread across his knuckles, forcing the blood away from his fingers. It made the scars across the backs of his hands more prominent, slightly raised from his smooth, fair skin. Seth sat up. “J.J., did you ever fight in the Arena?” “Yeah,” J.J. said. “A few times.” “Is that how you got your scars?” “These?” J.J. splayed his hands on the bleacher, examining the lacelike patterns as though he had forgotten all about them. “No. These I got as a child.” “How?” “Had my hands held in a bowl of silver powder, to teach me a lesson.” J.J. said this without looking at his twin, and a wave of nausea broke over Seth. Who hurt you? he wanted to ask. Except he knew the answer. Regent had told him. Hunters were forced to torture their werekin partners in the Scholae Bestiarii. If they refused, their werekin partners were forced to torture them. “Here he is,” J.J. said. Seth looked up. Marshall was trudging toward them, shoulders bowed inward like his stomach had been hollowed out. The contrast to the elated boy Seth had watched make that same journey last night was painful. He grabbed up his jacket and loped down the bleachers to Marshall’s side. “Is he letting you play?” Marshall shook his head. “You know the rules, Philadelphia.” Screw the rules. They were talking about Marshall’s future. Seth couldn’t believe Coach would be so unreasonable. “Yeah, but the scout from Duke is coming! Can’t Coach make one teensy little exception, just this once?” Marshall hesitated. Seth glared. “Indiana, whatever it is you’re not telling me, you better tell me, or I will break into Coach’s office and read the discipline report.” “He gave me a choice, all right?” Marshall pushed a stray basketball along the sideline with his foot, like it was a soccer ball. 88 “I can be benched Friday or I can be benched for the first sectionals game against Sacred Heart.” “Oh.” Seth brightened. “Well, that’s not so bad. The Duke scout will see how amazing you are, and – ” “I told him to bench me Friday.” Seth felt his jaw drop. He was flummoxed. He didn’t think he had ever been flummoxed before. “I…you…I don’t understand. Don’t you want to go to Duke?” “Yes.” Marshall was mumbling. He must have run his hands through his hair a lot in Coach’s office; it was standing up all around his head, inky strands tangled like vines. “But you guys can beat Elkville without me. Sacred Heart, maybe not. And if we lose at sectionals, we lose our chance at state.” Seth sometimes marveled at Marshall’s golden boy saintliness. Like a true alpha, he had chosen the good of the pack over his own desires. He put a hand on Marshall’s shoulder. “We’ll figure something out,” he promised, though he had no idea what. J.J. landed beside them, having leapt gracefully from bleacher to bleacher on his way down to the court. “You should have told me to punch him, Doc. I’ve already got one of those detention thingies because I answered a question in English class. Seth says it’s not so bad.” Yeah, Seth thought, they won’t hold your hands in silver powder, like some people. “Thanks,” said Marshall, “but I can’t fight my own fights.” Seth gave him a look. J.J. offering to punch someone for you was J.J. being nice. Marshall blew out a long breath. When he spoke again, his voice was more cheerful, if somewhat forced. “Oh well. There’s other colleges, right? It’s not like Duke is the only school that’s been interested in me.” He kicked the ball harder than Seth thought he meant to; it rolled across the court, smacking into the stage. “I’m more worried about you, Philadelphia. Aren’t you supposed to be healed by now?” J.J. asserted his opinion that Seth was overdue for a checkup, and Marshall insisted on driving them to the fort. “But you’re grounded,” Seth protested. “I’ll be more than grounded once my father gets that message,” Marshall said. “Let me enjoy my last few hours of 89 freedom. Besides,” he patted his backpack, “I need to return Agathon’s grimoire.” *** The last time Seth had been inside Fort King had been to fight a battle. As Marshall’s Audi circled up the long, paved drive, flashbacks to that awful night stung the backs of his eyes. He could see Angelo Alfaro, blistered by silver powder, hear his bellows change over to moans, smell the blood that had sluiced across the floor of the rotunda, the silver in the bullets that had felled so many of his kindred. He rested his forehead against the window, suddenly queasy. Fort King had been best known for its prison – which had never been a prison at all, but a top-secret Chimera hub used to stow werekin captives until they could be shipped to more secure locations. In the waning light, the prison’s black stone glittered like an insect carapace. A sense of organicness pervaded the behemoth structure, like it had been birthed from the pulsing womb of an underground monster, then had sprouted a labyrinthine series of wings connected by glassed-in skywalks. A monstrous fountain guarded the front entrance: a three-headed chimera, water spraying from three serpents’ heads attached to the body of a lion with a scorpion-stinger tail. A Marine waved them through the gate. J.J., a fully-fledged Resistance fighter, had the same credentials as McLain. Three sets of stone eyes marked the Audi’s progress as Marshall parked. It was not an illusion. The fountain was imbued with the trapped souls of the dead. As a necromancer, Agathon could communicate with them. Like a magical CC-TV system. The corrugated steel doors rattled upward when J.J. entered his passcode into the keypad. Instead of numbers and letters, the keys were Lemurian glyphs. Seth glanced up at the gun turrets on the roof as they ducked inside, into a wide corridor overlooked by walkways on the upper tiers of now-empty cellblocks. Straight ahead was a set of steel doors, still dented from Alfaro’s horns. Seth took a deep breath, braced to be struck by a wall of magic – the prison’s wards, meant to prevent werekin from skinning. Nothing happened. He blinked. “They took down the wards?” 90 J.J. shrugged. “McLain and his men are our allies now. It would be rude for them not to allow their allies to skin.” “But Chimera still has collared werekin fighters, right? Aren’t you worried they might attack?” J.J. smiled placidly. Right, Seth thought. J.J. did not worry about attacks. He wished for them. Looking around the rotunda now, you would never have known seventy hunters and half that many werekin had died there. The barred windows had been replaced by a single, oval-shaped pane of smoke-colored glass; a tree was painted on it, the branches formed from squiggling lines and curling circles – Lemurian glyphs. Seth recognized the symbols for star, ancestor, doorway before looking away, an odd buzz building in the back of his skull. The Birdcage that had confined the Black Swan was gone as well. In its place, growing straight out of the floor, was a fifteenfoot-tall obsidian statue. Seth had to study it a moment, like the abstract sculptures in the Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art, for the fluid curves to coalesce into a meaningful shape: a lithe, distinctly feminine form flowing into a long, supple neck and feathered wings, human skin and animal skin elegantly fused. A black swan. “Beautiful,” Marshall murmured. But he was looking at Seth, like he was saying Seth was beautiful. Seth blushed. J.J. coughed. “If you guys need a minute…” “J.J.,” Marshall said, mildly, “shut-up.” He slid his fingers into Seth’s. Hand-in-hand, they followed J.J. through a maze of obsidian corridors, with doors on either side opening into high-tech offices and sterile-looking labs. Fort King had been one of Chimera’s primary research facilities, the home of the Ark they had recovered from Mt. Hokulani, the submerged volcano that was all that remained of the lost island of Lemuria. J.J. stopped outside a door marked PRIVATE. Seth recognized it. This was the office where he and Cleo had first met McLain. Raised voices came through the door – a high-pitched squeak and a wolfish growl. Without knocking, J.J. strode inside. “Hey, Mel. Hi, Captain. Any word on Ben?” Teeny-tiny Melody Little looked around at them, pale green eyes shining with anger. She was standing behind the desk, knuckles pressed onto the stacks of papers scattered there. Mousy 91 brown hair was braided down the back of her Grateful Dead Tshirt. Captain McLain, dressed in his desert fatigues, leaned against the wall, arms folded. Across the desk from them was Derek Childers, a rangy young man with silvery blue eyes and a handsome face pockmarked by burn scars. As J.J. took up residence on a corner of the desk, McLain nodded to Seth and Marshall. “I’m afraid we don’t have much to share. The call placed to your house originated from somewhere in South America, but we haven’t been able to pin down an exact location,” he said. “I’ve got Dre working on it.” South America? What in the name of the stars was Ben Schofield doing in South America? Seth opened his mouth to ask, then remembered he didn’t have “clearance” and closed it. “That’s it?” J.J. said. “You haven’t found out anything about who this ‘Caroline’ is, or – ” “It’s been less than a day since we started investigating,” Melody interrupted sharply. “Have patience.” Mumbling something too low for anyone to hear, J.J. started picking papers up off the desk and scanning them, one at a time. Seth thought McLain would tell him to put them down, but apparently J.J. had pretty high-level security clearance. “Where’s Agathon?” he asked. “With the other freaks,” said Derek, “where he belongs.” J.J. slowly lowered the paper. “You’re not meeting with the Gen-0s now?” Derek jerked his chin at McLain. “Not as long as they take orders from his kind.” “Melody, this is ridiculous.” J.J. looked exasperated. “We have the advantage now, and we need to press it. What are we waiting for? LeRoi to rebuild her werekin army? You think she isn’t breeding more soldiers right now? You think she doesn’t have hunters collaring as many warrior breeds from the Underground as possible? You think she isn’t plotting to attack this fort and take back the Ark?” J.J. forced himself to take a breath. “Dre cracked the code. We know where Chimera’s other labs are. What we need –” “What we need,” said Derek, “is the Black Swan, but the last anyone saw of her, she was with Agathon. Whose word do we 92 have that she was freed? His?” He pointed at McLain, who was now standing up straight. “A freak and a human. Not what I call reliable witnesses. Not what any werekin would call reliable witnesses.” J.J. had gone still, like Regent used to do right before he skinned into a five-hundred-pound tiger and clawed someone’s face off. “So I’m not werekin enough for you because I was collared my whole life, is that it, Derek? Would you like to check my pedigree?” “J.J., please.” Melody sounded weary. “We voted this afternoon. The Commanders have decided: Until the Black Swan is produced, we will not accept General Burke’s alliance.” There was a moment of stunned silence during which Seth could hear his heart beating. He had had no idea the divisions in the Resistance ran this deep. “So that’s it?” J.J. said. “You’ve decided not to fight, when we’ve finally got LeRoi cornered? Damn it, Melody, we need – ” “What we don’t need,” Derek said, “is more advice from teenagers.” Whatever J.J. was about to say next, Marshall dispatched it by saying, “You have my word the Black Swan was freed.” Seth’s stomach bottomed right into his basketball shoes. Up until then, Derek had taken no notice of Marshall. Why should he? Marshall wasn’t werekin; he wasn’t a hunter; he wasn’t a soldier. He was nobody to the Resistance, which suited Seth fine. Now, Derek’s eyes fastened on him with wolfish hunger. “What do you mean, we have your word? Who are you?” “Marshall Townsend,” Marshall replied. “I’m the one – ” Seth stepped between them. Not that he was tall enough to block much of Marshall from Derek’s view. “He’s my boyfriend,” he said, quickly. “He was here the night of the battle. He saw the Black Swan leave, under her own power. That’s all he meant.” He stomped on Marshall’s foot, quelling his protest. McLain had come to attention against the wall. None of General Burke’s men knew Marshall had been involved in the Black Swan’s disappearance, either. That included McLain. Derek rubbed the stubble on his jaw, appraising Marshall thoughtfully. “Did she speak to you? Did she tell you where she was going?” 93 “Don’t be stupid.” J.J.’s tone suggested such a feat might be impossible for Derek. He slid around the desk so he was standing next to Seth, in front of Marshall. “Why would the Black Swan trust some random human with her location? She’s in hiding because she doesn’t trust any of us.” McLain sucked in a breath. He had become exceptionally pale. “J.J. is right,” he said. “The Black Swan does not want to be found. You need to accept that, Mr. Childers. She does not trust the Resistance.” Derek sneered. “As well she shouldn’t, if we throw our lot in with those who work for Chimera.” “Oh, for the love of the stars.” Melody massaged her temples. “We’re just talking in circles now. J.J., if you’re here for Agathon, he’s on the lower level.” Subtext: Get lost, kids. “What was all that about?” Marshall demanded, as they hurried after J.J. back through the maze of corridors moments later. Seth’s twin stalked ahead of them, veering away from the rotunda. Seth quickly filled Marshall in on the division in Operation Swan Song’s ranks, their pro-McLain and anti-McLain factions. “But that’s an easy fix,” Marshall said. “I’ll just go back there and explain – ” “Explain what?” At the end of a stark hallway, J.J. stopped, in front of an elevator with silver inlaid doors. There were no up or down buttons, just a keypad with Lemurian glyphs. “Explain that you helped the Black Swan escape? In case you weren’t listening, Doc, she doesn’t want anyone to know where she is.” “I wouldn’t have to say where she is. I’ll just explain that Agathon is telling the truth. He flew her away from Fort King, I put her in my car, and we drove away,” Marshall said. “They won’t believe you,” J.J. said. “Why? Because I’m not werekin?” “Basically, yes,” J.J. said. “Besides, look at you. You wear expensive clothes. You live in a big house. You drive a fancy car. They’ll assume you’re working for LeRoi. That she paid you off.” “J.J., I am dating a werekin.” Marshall said this slowly, with strained patience. “How could I be working for Chimera?” “You think you’d be the first human to keep one of us as a pet?” 94 Marshall grimaced like J.J. had plunged a knife into him. Seth knew he was hearing Cam, at Leigh’s Sweet Sixteen party, calling him Marshall’s new pet. Of course J.J. couldn’t have known that. He looked at Seth, baffled by the effect of his words. Seth flashed him a quick smile, trying to let him know it was okay, it wasn’t his fault. “Indiana, listen to me.” Tilting Marshall’s chin down, Seth looked hard into those crystalline baby blues. “Even if you could make them believe you, it’s too dangerous. We have a spy in the Resistance, working for LeRoi. Whoever that is could capture you, force you to tell them the Black Swan’s location.” “I wouldn’t do that,” Marshall said. “We know that, Doc,” J.J. said, quietly. “But you have to understand LeRoi. If she couldn’t torture it out of you, she would go after the people you love.” The flush faded from Marshall’s cheeks, leaving him quite pale. “Right,” he said, softly, and took a deep breath. “So, where are we going?” Smiling in a way that showed the points of his teeth, J.J. tapped a sequence into the elevator’s keypad. “Through the looking glass,” he said. *** Whiny emo music greeted them as the pneumatic doors whooshed open. J.J. looked at Seth and shrugged. “Humanists, remember?” Okay. Seth was totally introducing the Gen-0s to better bands than Paramore. The lower levels looked exactly how Seth pictured a mad scientist’s lair. The walls were smooth black stone, the tall ceilings supported by thin stone columns; the overhead fluorescent lights were encased in wire-mesh, like they needed to be protected from stampeding monsters. Bolted to the walls were shelves upon shelves of Lemurian texts and rows upon rows of glass-fronted cabinets, stocked with potions, powders, and elixirs. Pickled organs floated in formaldehyde jars. The air was close and dank. The elevator had opened onto a large, rectangular room. A long hallway branched off from it, into a web of rooms connected by 95 narrow, high-ceilinged corridors, like a network of caves. The lower levels, once Elijah Bishop’s private lab, were now the domain of the Alpha Clan, as the Gen-0s had deemed themselves, being the first of Chimera Enterprises’ experiments. Agathon and two other Gen-0s were lying on extra-long black couches by the hearth, sipping dark red liquid from crystal goblets. Definitely not wine, though the scent, Seth’s jaguar nose discerned, was too sharp to be human blood. Seth didn’t judge. He ate animals, too. The Gen-0s all had hairless bodies, mottled bluish-gray, like stone, though it was actually paper-soft. Each stood at least ten feet tall. Their features were pointed, feral, their eyes onyx black with no whites. Agathon, the largest creature Seth had ever seen, sprouted membranous black wings from his back and curly insectile antennae from his temples. Mothman, Seth still thought of him privately, not without affection. Xanthe, whom Seth had only seen once, was naked from the waist up, clad in an ankle-length kilt of forest-green, gossamer material. Bony ridges protruded from his spine, connected to a lizard tail that swept the floor behind him. His chest and cheeks were tattooed with scarlet glyphs. His head was smoothly bald. Seth didn’t know if that was natural or if he shaved it. The third Gen-0 was a stranger to Seth. She was extremely slender, almost delicate; deer antlers rose up from her mass of curly black hair, a pair of fawn-like hooves peeking out beneath her hooded white robe. Like the robe Marshall had worn in Seth’s dream, hers was embroidered with scarlet glyphs. “Seth.” Agathon set his glass down and rose from his couch. His black robe swirled around his webbed feet. “Is the canine well?” “You mean Captain Hook? Yeah, man, he’s great,” Seth said. “Thanks again for bringing him back.” Agathon beamed. His teeth were really pointy, like he filed them. “And your mother? She was not angry?” “Nah,” Seth lied. “We’re cool.” Agathon looked relieved. Seth hoped he wasn’t angling for a sleepover invite. Lydia wasn’t quite that cool with the necromancer. 96 J.J. had made an immediate beeline for Xanthe, who rose and drew him into a corner. Xanthe leaned in, as though listening intently, although J.J.’s lips never moved. Marshall was fishing into his backpack for the grimoire. Agathon clapped a hand on his shoulder – Marshall went white around the mouth – and steered him over to the cheerily crackling fireplace. “Marshall,” he rumbled, “this is my wife, Aphrodisia. Aphrodisia, Marshall.” In Lemurian, he added, “He is a Healer.” Aphrodisia inclined her head in a geisha-like bow. “It is an honor, Healer.” “You – you too,” Marshall stammered. Seth was still hung up a few sentences back. “I didn’t know you were married, Agathon,” he said. Could the Gen-0s reproduce? he wondered. Almost immediately, Seth decided there were some questions you simply did not want answered. Agathon’s wings opened and closed slowly. He would have been blushing, were such a thing possible for a Gen-0. “We are newlyweds,” he admitted. “Congratulations,” Marshall managed. “Seth?” J.J. came slinking over to them, Xanthe at his elbow. They made an odd pair, to say the least. J.J. slung an arm around Seth’s shoulder, proudly showing him off. “I want you to meet my teacher, Xanthe.” My teacher, he said, with something Seth had yet to hear J.J. show any adult. Respect. Wordlessly, Xanthe extended a hand, palm-up. Seth recoiled. The Gen-0 were his kindred; he did not think of them as freaks like Derek did. But something about Xanthe unnerved him. Something wholly unrelated to his lizard tail. “It’s all right,” J.J. said. “He just wants to say hello. Xanthe communicates like I do, telepathically.” Tentatively, Seth reached out. Xanthe’s fingertips touched his, and a spark, cold as a sliver of ice, flared behind Seth’s eyes, as a voice, soft as silk, said in his mind: You have seen Lemuria. Images from Seth’s dreams poured forth, as though Xanthe had ruptured a dam in his mind: the bowl-shaped tree in the graveyard splitting apart, an island rising from it; the golden orb rising above the nighttime river; the ancient race of animalistic beings lining the 97 shore…And another, older dream, one Seth had all but forgotten: the Black Swan walking along the beach, singing a haunting melody; the mountain at the heart of the island exploding in a fiery rain of golden lava on the last, dying note; the ocean turned to blood, churning up the charred bones of the werekin ancestors who had died to sink Lemuria, and the power of the Totems, beneath the sea…This is how it ends… She speaks to you. The Black Swan speaks to you. Seth jerked his hand back from Xanthe, shoving it into his pocket. His scalp was stinging like he had been pricked by thorns; he looked away quickly from the flat black eyes piercing his. J.J. might have trusted Xanthe, but Seth was not so sure. The telepath had just delved into his mind, uninvited, and called up precisely what he wanted to see. “I’m tired,” Seth said, tightly. “Can we do what we came here to do and go home?” “Of course,” J.J. said. It was clear from his puzzled expression that he had no clue what had just passed between his teacher and his twin. He explained to Aphrodisia about the pain in Seth’s scar. She directed Seth to remove his shirt and lie down on one of the long metal tables in the corner. Seth obeyed, feeling a little like a sacrificial lamb. It didn’t help that the table smelled like blood. Werekin blood. “Will this hurt?” J.J. asked, voicing the question Seth wanted to ask, but was afraid would sound wimpy. “It will not hurt,” Aphrodisia promised. She had a chime-like voice, like raindrops on glass. Seth wriggled around, trying to relax. Aphrodisia placed the tips of her tapered fingers on his scar and closed her eyes. “Marshall,” she said, holding out a hand. Marshall, who had been hanging back, stepped forward, placing his fingers in hers. His eyes widened, pupils expanding so his irises were almost entirely black. Seth could tell he wasn’t seeing the room anymore. He was seeing whatever Aphrodisia was seeing, which Seth guessed was the inside of him. “Jesus,” Marshall whispered. “What is that?” “What?” There was a shrill edge to Seth’s voice. He was being psychically X-rayed by a deer-woman. “What is what?” 98 “The wound has not healed.” Releasing Marshall’s hand, Aphrodisia opened her eyes and frowned down at Seth, small lines appearing between her eyes. Marshall staggered; Agathon righted him. “The silver in the bullet has leaked into your tissues. This was a design of Dr. LeRoi’s, to ensure a wounded werekin could not crawl away and survive, even if the bullet were to be removed.” “What does that mean?” “It means you continue to be damaged, on the inside,” Aphrodisia said. Seth looked down at his stomach, half-expecting his scar to rip open and his guts to flop out. He really had lost weight. Above the ridged muscles in his stomach, his ribs were clearly visible. “Your body is working to heal itself. In time, it may.” “It may?” J.J. echoed. “You mean he could still die?” Aphrodisia nodded. The shock of this did not really sink in for Seth just then. He couldn’t be dying. He had just been playing basketball. “My love, what can be done?” Agathon was still holding on to Marshall’s elbow. Marshall looked like he might pass out. Somehow, Seth didn’t think the mind-meld was to blame. He had gone white as a sheet at Aphrodisia’s nod. “I have potions. They will strengthen him, increase his natural abilities to heal.” Aphrodisia smoothed Seth’s brow. She smelled, not unpleasantly, of honeysuckle and rose. “The magic in your blood is strong, Seth Michael. Stronger than any I have ever felt.” Automatically, Seth’s gaze flicked to J.J. Aphrodisia smiled. “Yes. Stronger even than your brother’s.” Whoa, Seth thought. No way. J.J. was ten times more powerful than him, physically and magically. Aphrodisia hooked him up with a dozen glass phials of chartreuse-colored liquid – strengthening potion – and told him to drink one with breakfast, one with dinner, and she would see him back in a week. The werekin version of take an aspirin and call me in the morning. She and Marshall wandered over to one of the couches, deep in discussion about the potion’s magical properties. Seth slipped his shirt back on, legs hanging over the exam table. Agathon patted his back. “You will be well,” he promised. 99 “Thanks, Agathon.” Seth combed his fingers through his flattened hair. “Listen, we heard about the Commanders’ vote. I’m sorry they’re being so difficult.” Agathon smiled. He was incredibly Zen, for a necromancer. “The Commanders are distrustful. Werekin have many reasons to mistrust those who enslaved us. But I believe Captain McLain is loyal to the Black Swan. My father taught me that we must have faith in the essential goodness of humankind.” Seth frowned. “Your – father?” “Elijah Bishop,” Agathon clarified. Seth recalled the last line of Bishop’s journal. Faith is not wanting to know what is true. “I’m sure the Commanders will come around,” he said, although the truth was, he doubted it. Melody was in the minority in the Resistance for wanting to ally with McLain – a vocal minority, but a minority all the same. At the moment, with Ben and the Black Swan both M.I.A., Derek had all of the support. They needed to figure out who the spy was inside the Resistance. Then the Black Swan could emerge from hiding, and the werekin could stop fighting one another and focus on their real enemy. Chimera. 100 Chapter Nine: Back Story Once upon a time, the lodge-like house that loomed up in the Audi’s high beams had belonged to Werner Regent. Seth forced his eyes to remain on the ground, not to snap up automatically to the second-floor windows in search of Regent’s broad silhouette, as Marshall killed the engine, and he, Seth, and J.J. trekked across the lawn, shadows from the sentinel trees rippling across the lawn. “If you don’t feel up to training,” J.J. said, “we can cancel.” “Are you kidding?” Seth leapt straight from the frosted grass onto Regent’s porch. Cleo’s porch, he reminded himself. “I just downed Superman potion. I am so ready to train.” Seth really did feel incredible. He didn’t know what the street value of strengthening potion would be, but he was sure Aphrodisia could make a mint selling it on the black market. The others had arrived ahead of them, as Seth had deduced from the clunker van (their friend Chaz’s) and the battered Jeep (Vixen O’Shea’s) parked beside the woodpile that fed the great room’s slate-stone hearth. Dre was perched on one of the two taupe-colored couches, laptop open on his bony knees, pecking furiously at the keyboard; every few seconds, he swiped his bangs out of his eyes. He barely looked up as the newcomers walked in. Quinn was sitting with Emery on stools at the sunken bar, Emery’s white gi making him look lankier than ever. They were both sipping the chai tea that seemed to be the preferred brew of werekin warriors. When Regent had lived there, the walls had been adorned by macabre trophies: the corpses of the werekin Resistance fighters he had tortured and killed over the years, in his relentless pursuit of the blood of the Jaguar Clan. Cleo had given those poor souls proper burials in the acres of woods that surrounded the property. Otherwise, little had changed, aside from the mess. Regent would never have piled dishes in the sink or left takeout containers on the counter. Cats were neat freaks. Having once been a prisoner in this house, Seth had been surprised Cleo had chosen to live in it. But Regent’s house did have two special perks. One, the fully-equipped training studio belowground, and two, the glass-enclosed big cat playground, 101 complete with jungle canopy and babbling creek. The latter was a plus if you happened to be in love with a werejaguar and wanted to entice him into daily visits. Cleo appeared at the top of the stairs, dressed for butt-kicking in a black gi. J.J.’s eyes brightened at the sight of her. “Miss me?” he called up. “Not even a little.” Jumping the last step, Cleo pushed him out of the way with a smirk. Marshall had dropped his backpack on the couch beside Dre, armed with a bag of Doritos and a Coke. Aphrodisia had loaded him up with two new grimoires. Seth motioned for the others to head down to the Bat Cave (Dre did not look as though he would be moving from Cleo’s couch anytime this century; his beaky nose was so close to the laptop screen his breath was fogging the glass) and leaned on the back of the sofa. “How you holding up, Indiana?” “I might ask the same of you,” Marshall said. “Is karate really the best idea with a punctured gut?” “My gut is not punctured,” Seth said. “I saw your insides, remember?” Marshall twisted around to steal a kiss. The kind of kiss that made Seth’s head fuzzy. “Stop changing the subject,” he growled. Marshall grinned, popping out his dimple. That was almost as distracting as his kisses. “I’m serious. This basketball thing, it’s a big deal. If you want to talk about it, I don’t have to train right now.” “I’m fine, Philadelphia.” Marshall turned back to the grimoire. A page of notes was open beside him – Lemurian vocabulary words. He waved a hand. “Go. Fight with swords. Don’t get stabbed.” “You don’t stab with katanas,” Seth told him. “You slice.” Regent’s Bat Cave reminded Seth of a dojo, with its white mat stretching from mirrored wall to mirrored wall. An immense collection of weapons, running the gamut from crossbows to daggers, hung from iron pegs on one wall, above a table that held towels and bottled water. By the time Seth jogged down the steps, J.J. had changed into his karate gi, which was white, and tied a black headband around his golden head. He was showing Quinn how to execute a knife102 hand strike. Cleo rather deliberately did not look at them as she walked over to Seth, who hooked his curved samurai sword on one of the pegs and started shucking into his gi. “Guess you heard about the Resistance vote,” he said. Cleo nodded. “I can’t believe they won’t fight. McLain was sure, once Dre got us the intel, that they would.” Cleo always spoke of McLain with a soldier’s ardent reverence for a commanding officer. McLain had helped train her and J.J. in the Scholae Bestiarii. Remembering that made Seth remember the scars on J.J.’s hands, and how he had gotten them. He turned away from her, limbering up by arching his spine so far it popped. “There has to be a way to figure out who the spy is. Em, does your mom have any ideas who it might be?” Emery said she did not. Quinn, on the other hand, had a different theory. “My mother says Melody doesn’t want to suspect any of her fellow Commanders. But if I had to bet, I’d say it has to be one of them. No one else would have the clearance to know who the Black Swan was, or where Ben Schofield had been sent on his mission.” Snippets of the phone call came back to Seth. Bishop. Spy. Tortoise. Caroline. They are coming for you. “How’s Alfaro?” he asked. “Healing,” Quinn said. They got down to business then. The Scholae Bestiarii taught weaponry and martial arts. Regent had inducted Seth into the school of karate he, as a Gen-3, had been trained in, Wado Ryu. The Gen-7, like Cleo and J.J., had been trained in a slightly different style, more focus on weapons, less on hand-to-hand. Explained why they could fight equally well with swords, daggers, nun chucks, maces, or axes. Seth had never seen Regent pick up a weapon. Being a five-hundred-pound Bengal tiger, he hadn’t really needed to. They started with floor exercises – strikes, jabs, kicks. J.J., their undisputed alpha, led them, out in front with the others fanned out behind him, imitating his movements, flowing from stance to stance in a slow-motion ballet. J.J. was patient and supportive, stepping in a few times to correct Emery’s technique or show Seth a new move. He did not 103 yell at them for being limp noodles or numbskull cubs. He did not bark, “Now, again.” Those were silly things to miss, Seth told himself. Finally, J.J. tossed Seth’s katana to him and selected another from the weapons wall for himself. They placed them on the mat, knelt, and bowed to one another before unsheathing their respective blades. Seth’s katana had been a gift from Regent, forged specially for him. The curved blade was etched with a jaguar design: one light, one dark. It reflected a Mayan myth of two jaguar gods. The light jaguar ruled the land of the living; the black jaguar ruled the land of the dead. The myth had bothered Seth when Regent had told it to him. Now, as he looked into J.J.’s golden eyes, a mirror of his own, Seth thought how much he didn’t know about J.J. Such as why he had killed their father, or when he had stopped being loyal to LeRoi. Or if he ever had been in the first place. They needed a sit-down brother talk, and soon. Sadly, pinning J.J. down for a conversation was exactly like trying to lasso a wildcat. J.J.’s sword mirrored Seth’s in length and balance, but J.J. held his like he had been born with it in his hand. The twins faced one another, blades drawn. Cleo, Quinn and Emery observed from the wall, Emery in the middle, the girls studiously ignoring one another. The only word Seth had heard them speak to one another was hello. “You’re too stiff,” J.J. said. “Roll your shoulders back. Don’t fight the weight of the sword. Embrace it.” “Yes, sensei,” Seth intoned. J.J. snickered. Seth did as instructed. Instantly his shoulders fell more comfortably into their sockets, his spine elongating as he sucked his stomach in. “Good,” J.J. approved. “Now, listen up. Samurai sword training is not fencing, all right? You’d be sliced and diced if we just went at one another with blades this sharp. We’re going to start with the basic cuts, the side cut, which we call the yoko giri, and the vertical cut, the kesa giri. Then we just practice those moves over and over, until they’re so deeply ingrained in muscle memory they become reflexes. Got it?” “Yoko and Kesa,” Seth nodded. “Muscle memory. Got it.” “Then we begin,” J.J. said, “slowly.” 104 Paralleling one another on the mat, they parted the air with their swords in slow motion, first across the body (yoko giri), then straight down to the floor (kesa giri). J.J. was not showy; he didn’t flourish his sword or throw in fancy footwork. He taught Seth killing strokes calmly, methodically, using the same words as Regent. Honor. Courage. Discipline. Always, discipline. Seth no longer found it fruity, Way of the Warrior crap. He had fought in a battle. Seen firsthand what it meant to fight with courage, to die with honor. When J.J. sheathed his sword at last, their small audience applauded. Seth had been so focused he had forgotten anyone else was even in the room; only now did he feel the ache in his shoulders from wielding a sword nonstop for an hour. “That’s it?” he pouted, as J.J. returned his katana to the wall. “No sparring?” “It’s too dangerous,” J.J. said. Seth made a chicken-clucking noise. J.J. didn’t crack a smile, but Cleo unhitched from the wall, ice-chip eyes glittering. “I’ll spar with you, sweetheart,” she said. “I won’t even need a sword.” “You want some of this, Cleopatra?” Seth spread his arms, the sword dangling from his fingertips. “Come and get it.” Cleo smiled. Don’t mind if I do. Foregoing the nicety of bows, she attacked, in a rapid-fire series of kicks and jabs Seth had to dance sideways to avoid. A karate-chop zipped by his ear, a blow that would have knocked him senseless had it landed; he pivoted, swinging the sword in a side cut – only to fly backwards, into the wall, as Cleo’s heel slammed into his solar plexus. He slid to the mat. Cleo plucked up the sword and leveled the tip at his throat, pricking his Adam’s apple. J.J. tensed, minutely. Emery was bouncing on his toes, furry ears twitching, halfway skinned. Seth lifted the hand that was not holding his ribs. “I surrender,” he groaned. “Smart boy.” Cleo lowered the blade. “You know what your mistake was?” “Besides agreeing to fight you?” Cleo smirked. “You were only fighting with your sword. If you rely too much on a weapon, it becomes a crutch, not an instrument.” 105 She shot J.J. a look. “Your point?” he drawled, offering Seth a hand up. “My point – ” Cleo tossed the sword at him; J.J. caught it onehanded “ – is that if you’re going to teach him, teach him right.” *** J.J. wanted Seth to stay and romp in the big cat playground. Seth wanted to; he hadn’t skinned for any length of time in days. But the potion was wearing off, and his trying day was catching up to him. “Rain check,” he said. “And don’t forget we have school tomorrow.” J.J. sighed. Emery and Dre had to take off as well. Inventory night at ReSpin. Quinn, her gi traded out for her usual sport-o gear, walked over to the glass wall and peered inside. J.J. said something to her, something Seth didn’t hear, but Quinn nodded. J.J. offered her a hand, stepping backwards through the opening in the glass onto one of the enormous limbs that arced almost fifty feet above the creek. Quinn followed him out onto it. Together, they picked their way down the branches to the creek. Cleo turned on her heel, glancing at Marshall. He was busy packing up his grimoires. “I’ll walk you out,” she volunteered to Seth. He followed her onto the porch. A light drizzle was falling as they crossed the lawn; the air was hazy, the moon a misty crescent shrouded by smoky clouds. Cleo hopped up on the Audi’s trunk. Seth propped a hip against the fender, twirling his katana. He wanted to say something to reassure her about J.J. and Quinn, but as he and Cleo had never actually discussed her feelings for his twin, he wasn’t sure how to. “Have you heard from Connor Burke?” he asked, instead. “No. I only met him the one time,” Cleo said. “It’s not like I gave him my number.” “Does that mean he asked for it?” “He was a perfect gentleman,” Cleo said. Moonlight silvered her eyes as she leaned back on her palms. The connection was just that simple – and Seth, feeling his stomach roll over, could not believe he had never made it before. 106 “Cleo,” he said, impulsively, “was one of your parents a werewolf?” Cleo stared at him, frozen. Then she slid off the car and started for the house. “Wait.” Seth grabbed her wrist; Cleo turned, her arms sliding around his neck as she did, and suddenly it did not matter to Seth what had happened between her and J.J. in the Scholae Bestiarii – what Cleo had been made to do, as a child, to survive. Cleo was his best friend. He wanted to squeeze the hurt right out of her. He buried his nose in her neck. “I’m sorry – that was thoughtless of me, I shouldn’t have – ” “My mother,” Cleo whispered, her lips against Seth’s ear. “I was taken from her when I was born. All hunters are. I – I never knew her…” “Cleo.” Seth hugged her closer. “I’m sorry.” “Am I interrupting?” Marshall’s voice was clipped. He was standing a few feet away, a muscle working in his jaw. Cleo quickly stepped back from the embrace, cuffing at her cheeks with the back of her hand. Seth rolled his eyes. As if Marshall had reason to be jealous of Cleo. Now, if he had walked in on Seth cuddling Emery, it would have been a different story. “You okay?” he asked, softly. “Of course I am,” Cleo said. Without meeting Marshall’s eyes, strode back to the house. ** At lunch the next day, the first day of Marshall’s suspension, Seth accompanied J.J. to the Haven table. The ballplayers’ table held little appeal to him without Marshall there, even if Cam was MIA as well; Topher had reported that his nose was broken so severely he was seeing a plastic surgeon to have the cartilage repaired. For a golden boy, Marshall packed one hell of a right hook. Whitney had jumped ship as well. She was currently occupying Dre’s usual seat beside Emery, Dre nowhere to be seen. Seth never saw Whitney these days without her nose stuck in the book of sonnets Emery had given her for Valentine’s Day. They made a cute pair, he thought, Emery in his denim jacket and stonewashed 107 jeans, Whitney in her corduroy skirt and sloppy cardigan, both just a little off-beat. Leigh, attached at the hip to Bryce, threw J.J. dark looks across the room for stealing Seth away. “How was detention?” Quinn asked, as J.J. lowered onto the chair beside hers. He had been even later than usual coming home from his romp last night. Seth noticed that he laid his arm across the back of Quinn’s chair, angling casually toward her. “No worse than class,” he said. “How’s Doc doing?” “Okay, I guess.” Whitney pushed her book aside. “Marshall has never done anything like this before. He’s never even been in a fight.” “He has natural talent,” said J.J., helpfully. “He laid Collin out.” “Cam,” Emery corrected. J.J. nodded like he cared. “How hard did your father come down on him?” Seth asked. “It was ugly.” Whitney sounded bleak. “He screamed at him for an hour, about how he needs to make better choices, because Dad won’t always be there to bail him out, and if he doesn’t get his act together he can forget about med school…” “Good Christ,” Emery said, pink nose wrinkled in disgust. “It was one fight.” “Marshall just sat on the couch with his hands in his lap. He didn’t say a word. When it was over, he went upstairs and closed his door. He hadn’t come down before I left this morning.” Ozzie Harris patted Whitney’s shoulder; her lower lip was trembling. Seth, his appetite gone, threw his napkin over his tray. His cell phone rang then. Seth so rarely used it he had to fumble around in his backpack to find it. He didn’t recognize the number, and his heart sped up. “Hello?” “Seth?” The voice was Jack’s. Seth was disappointed. He had been hoping for Ben. “Hang on a sec,” he said, and hurried out of the cafeteria, into the chilly courtyard, for some privacy. He didn’t think J.J. would rat him out to Lydia for talking to Jack, but Seth wasn’t ready for J.J. to know their step-father was delving into Thomas Sullivan’s past. Thomas was an awkward subject between them. 108 The day was drizzly and cold. Only a few twelfth-graders had braved it, hunkered down by the band room, smoking cigarettes on the sly. Seth was pretty sure they were about to be busted. Someone was sitting in the black sedan he had seen parked in the teachers’ lot the other evening. Probably Dr. Gideon. He seemed the type to eat lunch alone in his car. A small figure was hunched under a gray poncho by the gym doors. Not smoking, just sitting. Seth thought he recognized the beat-up tennis shoes. He sat down at one of the picnic tables, running his fingers through the raindrops beading on the wood. “Okay. What’s up?” “I looked into Tommy, like you asked,” Jack said. “I have some information.” There was a pause. “I’m listening,” Seth said. “Oh. Did you want me to tell you now?” No, Jack, I’d like you to dangle this information in front of me and call back in the morning. “Now is good for me,” Seth said. “Well, I thought…If you have time this weekend, I thought I might tell you in person.” Lydia would quash that in a heartbeat. “Actually, I don’t think I’m allowed to see you,” Seth said. “Oh,” Jack said, again. “Well, all right. I – ” “Wait.” Seth sighed. This was probably a bad idea, but as he daily proved, most of his ideas were. “Mom has a library board meeting on Saturday morning. Pick me up at nine.” It was agreed. Seth said a quick goodbye, tucked the phone into his pocket, and crossed the damp courtyard. “What’s shakin’, Baby Bird?” The small figure under the gray poncho squinted up at him through the drizzle. Unsurprisingly, a sleek black laptop was sheltering under the poncho with him. “Hi, Seth,” Dre said. Something was up with Baby Bird. When Seth had first met him, Dre had been a live wire of kinetic energy. Now he looked…droopy. Even his brightly-colored wardrobe had been watered down to a plain white T-shirt and striped black pants. Seth sank down on the concrete next to him. “Does McLain know you do your top-secret ultra-classified hacking on your lunch hour?” he asked. “Actually, I was working on my history paper,” Dre said. 109 “History, huh? Leigh hates that class.” Dre’s lashes lowered over his quick, dark eyes. Ah-ha, thought Seth. “You know, if you want to get a girl’s attention, moping around in the rain by yourself really isn’t the best way,” he said. Dre cocked his head inquisitively to one side. “How do you get a girl’s attention?” While Seth’s experience with the fairer sex was, admittedly, limited, he had lived with Leigh for the last two months. And growing up in the Underground had made him an astute observer of human behavior. “From what I’ve seen, the more you act like you don’t know they’re alive, the more girls notice you.” Dre looked puzzled. “So…if I want Leigh – I mean, if I want a girl to like me, I should be mean to her?” “Girls are complex creatures,” Seth said, advice Whitney Townsend had once given him. “Now.” He leaned in, doublechecking that J.J. hadn’t snuck up behind them. He had a tendency to do that. Drove Leigh nuts. “Do you know anything about a Chimera facility in South America?” Dre jumped like Seth had poked him with a cattle prod. “No! I mean, uh, not that I…” “Andre. Andre, Andre, Andre.” Seth shook his head. “Did I or did I not just do you a solid with the girlfriend advice?” “Well…that is…yes.” Dre deflated, small hands fluttering back to his sides. “Okay. But I can only tell you what I know.” “Which is?” “It’s not a Chimera facility,” Dre said. “McLain and Ben think it might be the location of the Tortoise Clan.” He explained about the coordinates on LeRoi’s PDA, the heat signature in the Amazon Rainforest, near Manaus, Brazil. “You do know what McLain and Agathon think is hidden inside Mt. Hokulani, right?” Seth nodded. He knew the bell would be ringing soon; he willed it to hold off just a bit longer, now that he had Baby Bird singing. “A spaceship.” “Not just a spaceship. Not really.” Dre was speaking very quietly and very quickly; as his voice was soft anyway, Seth had to strain to catch the words. “If you sent a rocket up to Jupiter, you wouldn’t find the Totems hanging out on one of its moons. Agathon believes they came from another dimension.” 110 “What,” Seth said, “through like a wormhole?” He was only half-serious, but Dre bobbed his head. “Something like that, yes. A dimensional door. A portal. Bishop and LeRoi were convinced if they could raise Lemuria they would find a device that could carve a doorway in the space-time continuum, allowing the werekin, or anyone with control of their magic, to travel to the Totems’ dimension. The Ark is the key to raising Lemuria, but the Tortoise Clan guards the Source that operates the device.” McLain had told Seth some of this prior to the battle at Fort King, though he had neglected to mention other worlds LeRoi might try to conquer. “And the Tortoise Clan is...?” “The only clan to have survived the sinking of Lemuria. If you believe the legends.” Dre didn’t sound as though he did. “And Agathon does?” “Xanthe does.” Ergo, thought Seth, J.J. does. “Elijah Bishop’s father, Abraham Bishop, was an archaeologist. He made a career out of studying Mayan ruins. When Elijah Bishop was ten years old, he went with his father on an expedition into the Amazon. A year later, he walked out, alone, and Abraham Bishop was never heard from again. But a decade later,” Dre said, “Elijah Bishop discovered the remains of Lemuria. Xanthe believes the Bishops found the Tortoise Clan, and they told them how to raise Lemuria.” Bishop. Tortoise Clan. They are coming for you. “So Ben went looking for the Tortoise Clan? Why?” “Because LeRoi wants what the Tortoise Clan is protecting. Ben went to the Amazon to find LeRoi, because if we capture LeRoi, the Black Swan can come out of hiding, and we can all go home.” There was a finality to the way Dre said “home.” The bell rang then, and Dre hopped to his feet. “You won’t tell anybody I told you all of this, will you?” he said. “Especially not J.J.?” He seemed a little afraid J.J. might eat him. Seth vowed to keep Dre’s breach of national security just between them. All afternoon, though, he kept returning to what Dre had told him. He kept thinking about Ben, hunting down LeRoi in the jungle, and wondering why he had never called back. 111 Cleo’s new truck was bitchin’. Her lifestyle was being financed by Operation Swan Song now; McLain had sprung for her a Ford F150 Super Crew in Red Candy Metallic, tricked out with a gun rack in the back window and a stereo system Seth would have busted a window out for back in Philly. He informed Cleo of this as she drove him home from training that night. Emery had driven J.J. to Fort King, to talk to Xanthe about something. “Thank you,” said Cleo, as she turned into the Stewards’ drive. She had changed from her karate gi into cotton shorts and a T-shirt that said KEEP STARING, I’M RELOADING. “You should ask McLain to give you clearance to drive the Yamaha again.” Seth sighed wistfully. Ah, the Yamaha. He missed his baby. Sometimes he went outside to visit her in the garage, under her tarp. “Mom would flip, though,” he said. “J.J. says your mom flips over everything.” “She is a little stressed right now,” Seth admitted. The street lights winked on, at the same time a light came on in Marshall’s bedroom. A tall shadow moved behind the curtain. Lydia and Leigh had planned a girls’ night out with Meredith and Whitney, Seth recalled, and Dr. Townsend, as Marshall had once said, never made it home before ten. Meaning his boyfriend, poor dear, was home alone. He looked back at Cleo. “Do you think J.J. will stay in Fairfax, now that the Resistance isn’t fighting?” “Where else is he going to go?” Cleo said. “J.J. would never make it Underground. He’s too…J.J.” That was certainly true. Even without jaguar spot tattoos around his eye, J.J. would never blend in with humans. Girls still tripped over themselves staring at him in the halls. Although possibly that had to do with something other than the werekin vibe. “Anyway, McLain will find out who the spy is eventually, and then the ball will get rolling on taking down LeRoi.” “I still think it’s Derek,” Seth asserted. “You just think that because you don’t like him,” Cleo said. “You’ve seen his scars, right? Hunters did that to him. Derek hates hunters. That’s why he doesn’t trust McLain – because he helped train hunters for Chimera.” As if called by her words, in the rearview mirror Seth spied the young captain jogging up the sidewalk. His sweatshirt was soaked 112 in the back, dark hair stuck to his head; he had obviously been running hard for several miles. Seth had the sense that the music pumping through his earphones had a hard beat. He glanced over at the Stewards’ as he turned up his own walk, saw Cleo’s truck, and waved. Seth waved back. “Leigh told me he has a sister.” “I wouldn’t know. We don’t really talk about that stuff.” Cleo put the truck in drive, and Seth reached for the door handle. “You coming over this weekend?” “Sure,” said Seth. “If you want me to.” “I want you to.” Cleo leaned over to kiss his cheek. “’Night, sweetheart.” Seth climbed out and waved until her taillights disappeared through the misty rain. Then he snuck around to the Townsends’ backyard, skinned, and leapt onto the roof. Acutely aware that he was visible from the street, the jaguar padded across the shingles to Marshall’s window and scratched at the glass. The curtain twitched. “Jesus!” someone yelped. Seth waved a paw, whining low. Marshall, it’s Seth! Let me in! A moment later, the sash opened. Seth padded in, skinning as he jumped to the floor. “I’m never going to get used to that,” Marshall sighed. Seth grinned. Marshall was already in his p.j.s – sweatpants and a faded Adidas T-shirt. “How goes the incarceration?” he asked. “Productive,” Marshall said. He gestured at his bed. The grimoires Aphrodisia had given him were open on his pillow, as were three different medical journals, all open to articles on human cloning. His bedside table was stacked with yellow legal pads, each covered in his blocky handwriting. Seth raised an eyebrow. “Indiana, if you were creating an alien zombie virus to destroy the world, you would tell me, right?” “Absolutely, Philadelphia. You’d be the first to know.” Marshall stretched out on the bed. Seth shrugged out of his letterman’s jacket, kicked his shoes off, and stretched out next to him, wishing he had showered at Cleo’s. He smelled more like a goat than a cat. “Whitney said it was a bad scene with your dad,” he prompted, gently. 113 “That’s putting it mildly. He made me call and apologize to Cam.” “Bet that was fun,” Seth grinned. “Tons.” Marshall scooted closer to him. “Can you stay?” A little zing shot through Seth’s heart. “You mean, all night?” “Just to sleep,” Marshall said quickly. What happened to “carpe diem”? The last time Seth had been in this bed, Marshall had been taking his clothes off. “What about your father?” “I’ll lock the door.” Marshall popped up on an elbow. “Please?” Like anyone with a soul could say no to those baby blues. Seth showered in Marshall’s lavish bathroom – alone, as Marshall seemed to be firmly back inside his golden boy boundaries tonight. The T-shirt and sweats he had provided were three times too big. Seth decided against them and emerged in his own jeans, shirtless. Marshall was already under the covers with the lights off. Seth crawled in beside him and tucked the covers around his chin. His new scar made him self-conscious. “Did you call your mom?” Marshall asked. “Yup. She says she sees no evil, hears no evil, and will mention nary a word to your mother.” Just another reason, Seth thought, that Lydia was SuperMom Goddess. They kissed for a while. When Seth tangled his fingers in Marshall’s hair, Marshall kicked the covers to the foot of the bed and rolled over on top of him. “What happened to just sleeping?” Seth whispered. “Sorry.” Marshall fell back on his pillow with a groan. “I’ll behave.” “I wasn’t telling you to stop,” Seth protested. Marshall mumbled what sounded like “don’t tempt me.” Seth was all about tempting him, but first, he had a question. “Indiana, this thing with Cam – ” “Cam?” Marshall sat up. “You want to talk about Cam now?” “Why not now?” “Fine,” Marshall said, exasperated. “I shouldn’t have punched him. But he hurt you, because of me. I know you’re going to say that’s a double standard, that now I know how you feel, and maybe 114 you’re right. But I couldn’t – when I saw your face, and you were in pain – ” “I wasn’t in that much pain,” Seth said. “How much pain do you have to be in before I’m allowed to care, exactly?” He had Seth there. Turning Marshall’s hand over, Seth kissed the pulse point in his wrist. “This conversation we’re having,” he said. “Does it qualify as a fight?” Marshall’s lips twitched. “Probably. Why?” “Because that means we can make up later.” Marshall snorted with laughter. Seth pulled him back down on the bed, draping an arm across his chest. Part of him wanted to let the Cam subject drop, get back to kissing, but he knew something was wrong. Something that made Marshall’s kisses, sweet as they were, taste a little sad. “I’m not giving you a hard time for punching Cam, all right?” he said. “I was just wondering why you did it. And don’t say it’s about me. I know there’s more to it. Bryce told me you guys used to be friends.” For a long time Marshall was quiet, staring at the shadows drifting across his closet door. Folded laundry was stacked in front of it, like he hadn’t bothered putting anything away after he had taken it out of the basket. Seth waited him out, tracing circles on Marshall’s collarbone, practicing that stillness Regent had taught him. At last, Marshall said, “Last summer, right before school started, I was staying over at Cam’s. No big deal. We practically lived at each other’s houses growing up. He fell asleep, but I couldn’t, so I went downstairs to watch TV. “It was really late. Like two in the morning. Dr. Foss was on the couch, reading. I hadn’t even realized he was home. Cam’s mom died a long time ago, and Dr. Foss lives at the hospital, even more than my father does. Anyway, he asked me to get him a beer. I could tell he’d had a lot to drink already, but it was none of my business if he wanted to get plastered in his own house, so I went out to the kitchen to get him one. And he…came up behind me, while I was at the fridge.” Seth swallowed hard. No way this story had a happy ending. “He put his hands on my shoulders. Like really tight. He was saying all this stuff, I don’t remember most of it, just stuff about 115 how I’d turned out better than anyone had dreamed, how I’d made good on all of my potential. There wasn’t anything wrong with what he was saying. It was just the way he was saying it. And the whole time he was holding me there, like in place or whatever, rubbing my shoulders. It freaked me out. As soon as he let go of me, I handed him his beer and went back upstairs. “The next day, I made the mistake of telling Cam about it. He blew up. We had this huge fight. I’ve known Cam since we were born, and we had never, ever fought like that. He told me I had misunderstood. He said his dad wouldn’t come on to me, or whatever. And I had to admit, nothing really happened. But I wouldn’t go over there anymore. And that’s when Cam started making his little digs about me being gay.” “What did your father say?” Seth asked, softly. “I didn’t tell him. I was afraid he would think the same thing as Cam – that it was something I did that made Dr. Foss act like that.” Even in the half-light, Seth could see Marshall was blushing. Not a blush of embarrassment. A blush of shame. He sat up. “Indiana, you know that isn’t true. You were seventeen. If a grown man had done that to Whitney, started touching her when they were alone in the middle of the night, would you say it was something she did that made him cross that line?” “No,” Marshall said. He didn’t seem convinced, though. He scrubbed a hand across his face. “Anyway, it doesn’t matter now. Cam was a jerk and a bully our whole lives. I just never said anything before because he wasn’t picking on people I cared about. And now we’re not friends, so I guess that’s that.” He sounded worn out. Physically and emotionally drained. Seth lay back down beside him. “Indiana?” “Yeah?” “I’d like to make up now.” Marshall laughed. *** Later, after Marshall fell asleep, Seth picked up one of the notepads on his bedside table and flipped through it. A little flower of unease opened inside his heart. 116 Drawn in the margins of every page was the same image, over and over: a slender female form flowing into a graceful neck and feathered wings. A black swan. 117 Chapter Ten: The Ovid Experiment Win or lose, the Fairfax High Knights always retired to MoJo’s after their games. Friday night, Seth was simply not in the mood for more quality time with his teammates. When Lydia insisted on treating him to dinner out, he suggested Raw Fish, a dimly-lit, hyper-Asian fusion hotspot with ultramarine walls dotted with round, opaque windows overlooking the river. Tangerine-colored booths surrounded the central polished bar, behind which mounted aquariums teemed with colorful fish. Leigh had been dying to try it out since the restaurant had opened last month. Reservations were preferred, but the hostess recognized Jack Steward’s wife on sight and ushered their party to a booth in the back. Seth linked his arm through Lydia’s, escorting her like a character in a black-and-white movie. They were woefully underdressed in their Fairfax High sweatshirts and jeans, having just come from the game – a heartbreaking 75 to 72 loss for the Knights. Marshall had cheered his team on from the bench through every botched play. Of which there had been many: At the buzzer, Topher had gone up for a three-pointer, a shot that would have tied the game, and which Marshall could completely have nailed; their captain had come off the bench, shouting wildly; but the ball had bounced off the rim, and Marshall had slumped back down, shoulders hunched like stones were being piled on top of him. Dr. Townsend had been in the stands, glaring daggers at Seth. As though Marshall’s fall from grace was all his doing. Lydia stopped three times on their way across the restaurant to say hi to people she knew. J.J. did not stick around to be introduced. He headed straight for their booth, pursued by Leigh, who plunked down across from him and launched into what appeared to be a furious tirade. “Any ideas what they’re fighting about now?” Lydia inquired of Seth, sotto voice. Seth’s answer, which was that he had no idea – J.J. could annoy Leigh simply by breathing – was lost in a tremendous yawn. Lydia frowned at him. “Seth, honey, are you getting enough rest?” “Just tired from the game,” Seth assured her. He slid into the booth across from J.J. and picked up his menu to hide behind, 118 fingering the phial of strengthening potion in his pocket. He had not apprised Lydia or Leigh of Aphrodisia’s diagnosis. Knowing them, he would have been benched until his Gen-0 Healer wrote him a clean bill of health. Marshall had sacrificed the scholarship to Duke to bring home the state title. The Knights were going all the way this season, if Seth had to be carried out on a stretcher afterwards. A server came by to take their order. Seth excused himself to the restroom straightaway. Alone, he downed the potion, feeling like the junkie Regent had once painted him as. In the gilt mirror above the porcelain sinks, he inspected his scar. It was ropy and raised, a white cord across his lap, tender to the touch. With a pang Seth noted the concavity between his hipbones. His eyes were impossibly large in his thin face. Even with the potion, the constant healing was sapping him. “You are not dying,” he told his reflection. The argument between J.J. and Leigh had receded into their usual sniping by the time he returned to the table. “You know those fish used to be alive,” Leigh was informing J.J., as she stabbed at her seaweed salad. J.J. scooped smoked salmon up with his chopsticks. “Tasty, wriggly little fishies…” Leigh looked like she wanted to call him a name she couldn’t with their mother present. She shifted her attention to Seth, eyes gentling. “Were you sick?” “When?” Seth asked innocently. “Just now, in the bathroom. You were gone a while.” “I was fixing my hair.” Seth speared a veggie roll off her plate, and nearly gagged on it. Humus. Yech. All the cream cheese and red onion in the world couldn’t disguise that cardboard taste. He wiped his tongue on a napkin. “So you weren’t getting sick?” Leigh pressed. “Back off, would you?” J.J. said. The silver-haired couple in the booth next to theirs frowned at him. J.J. flashed a fanged smirk and they quickly turned away, whispering to one another. “He said he was fine. Leave him alone.” “Just because you don’t care what happens to him doesn’t mean I can’t be concerned,” Leigh fired back. 119 Lydia put her wine glass down rather forcefully. “Is it possible for the two of you to eat one meal without biting each other’s heads off?” “No,” Leigh and J.J. said, in unison. Seth slurped his soup to stifle a laugh. For dessert they ordered mitsumame, served in fluted crystal bowls with individual cups of black syrup. J.J. and Seth had two helpings apiece, and Seth finished Leigh’s. She was staying skinny in case Bryce asked her to prom. Emery had already asked Whitney. The girls were planning a dress shopping extravaganza. The main event was just weeks away. On the drive home, Seth sacked out, utterly exhausted, in the back of the Escalade. Up front, Lydia and Leigh were chatting about the upcoming school board meeting to vote on her antidissection petition. “What did you need to talk to Xanthe about last night?” Seth whispered to his twin. “You,” J.J. said. “He’s interested in your dreams. He wants to train you, like he did me.” “You sent me those dreams,” Seth pointed out. “Not all of them,” J.J. said. Seth brushed that aside. “You’re the psychic one, J.J. I’m just tuned into your channel.” “The asshole channel?” Leigh volunteered. “Adleigh, enough,” Lydia sighed. “If you keep picking on your brother, you will be grounded, do you understand?” “He’s mean to me, too,” Leigh grumbled. “When?” J.J. demanded. “When am I mean to you? I don’t bug you at school. I don’t bug you at home. I try to be around you as little as possible.” Always tactful, Seth’s twin. “Right,” said Leigh. “Because all you’re here for is Seth.” “What the hell does that mean?” “You know what it means.” Leigh spun around in the seat. The passing street lights pulsed on her porcelain-doll features like a strobe light. “You want Seth to run off with you and join the Resistance. You don’t care that he could be killed. When he was hurt, where were you? At his bedside, like me and Mom? No. You were off with your soldier friends.” Seth attempted to interrupt, but Leigh was on a roll. “Now you want him to spend hours training with you, even though he obviously isn’t well, and you want to 120 subject him to some mind experiment with that freakazoid telepath you love so much, even though he obviously wants no part of it – ” “Freakazoid, huh?” J.J. said, quietly. “Like Dre Alfaro?” Leigh colored scarlet, for reasons Seth did not understand. “Admit it, J.J. You don’t care about Seth. All you care about is winning your stupid war.” “You have no idea what I would do to protect Seth,” J.J. said. “You have no idea the things I’ve already done.” Leigh’s teeth worked over her bottom lip. She looked down, her guilty flush creeping higher across her cheekbones. The silence in the car seemed to be made of water, too dense to swim through. Seth realized the car had stopped; they were home. Lydia was clenching the wheel; the dark-tinted windshield showed Seth her reflection, the agony stamped onto her features as deeply etched as the engravings on his sword. It was the expression she had worn in their basement, holding J.J.’s baby booties, believing him buried in the ground. Sleeping with the stars. The pop of J.J.’s door opening made them all jump. Seth dove out after him, chasing him into the backyard. “J.J.! J.J., wait!” J.J. leapt onto the fence, and stopped there, balanced on his toes. “Seth, I can’t be here right now.” “I’ll come with you.” Seth started to climb up. His heart was thumping inside his chest. He wasn’t sure if he meant just for the night, or forever. “No.” J.J. held a hand out to stop him. “You’re exhausted. Get some sleep. I just – I want to run. Okay?” His voice faltered. J.J.’s voice never faltered. Seth rested his palm against the rough brick wall. “Leigh loves you,” he said, a little desperately. “We all love you, J.J. You know that, right?” Shadows latticed J.J.’s face, throwing the gold of his eyes into sharp relief, like captured suns. “Think about working with Xanthe, all right?” he said. “You need training, Seth. You’re more powerful than you understand.” Then he jumped off the wall, leaving Seth alone. *** Soupy August heat slicked his neck with sweat. Seth was padding down the sidewalks of South Philly in his human skin, 121 smelling garbage and rust, the perfume of his urban jungle. In the park across the street, some kids were hanging out, listening to music. They did not call out to Seth, and he did not go over to them. In the Underground, werekin kept to themselves. Stars competed with the pinkish-orange glow of the city lights, pale mirrors in the night sky, as he turned up the walkway of his row house. A shadow detached from the darkness beside the stoop. Seth froze, envisioning a hunter, but the shadow materialized under the street lights as a barrel chest straining against the buttons of an XXXL flannel shirt, a pair of steel-toed boots, and a head of bushy salt-and-pepper hair. “Ben,” Seth gasped. His voice cracked, the too-high voice of a fourteen-year-old cub. “Trying to give me heart failure, Papa Bear?” “Prowlin’ kinda late, aren’t ya, runt?” Mild as his tone was, Seth heard the rebuke. He flopped down on the step, fingering the narrow metal file in his pocket. “Are you ratting me out to Naomi?” “Would it stop you if I did?” “No,” Seth said. He would just take the lecture and be sneakier next time, to avoid being caught again. “So what’s up?” “Came by to show you this.” Ben palmed something from his pocket – a small, rectangular piece of paper, like a playing card. He pressed it on Seth, who held it up to the light. It was a Tarot card. Drawn on it was a man, hanging upside down, ankle tied to a wooden gallows. “The Hanged Man” was written across the top. Seth looked up at Ben. “Want to tell me my future?” “You know I don’t believe in that juju,” Ben harrumphed. “Found that on my sidewalk this morning.” He indicated the card with a jerk of his whiskered chin. Seth looked back down at it. A pentagram was drawn on the hanged man’s flank, an Egyptian ankh and a Christian cross beside it. Symbols of resurrection. “Just lying there, like somebody dropped it. My wife, God rest her, was Creole, ya know. She had a Tarot deck. I remember her tellin’ me the Hanged Man was a card about sacrifice. Surrendering your life for the good of all, like Osiris or Christ. Then this afternoon, what do you know but I find out an old friend of mine did just that, fightin’ for the Resistance.” 122 The Resistance? Ben never talked about the Resistance. Other than to warn Seth off from joining it. Puzzled, he offered the card back to him. “I’m sorry about your friend,” he said. “I don’t need it back.” Ben stuck his hands in his pockets. “Keep it, throw it away, whichever. I just wanted to show it to you. I wanted to tell you about my friend. He was a good man. When I’m dead and buried someday, maybe you’ll remember me telling you about him, and then it won’t be like either of us is really gone.” Seth’s eyes flew open like someone had shaken him awake. He glanced at his alarm clock. Only 5:31, a whole half-hour before his alarm would buzz. Going back to sleep was impossible. He slipped downstairs, opened the back door to let Captain Hook out, and poured himself a bowl of Cornflakes. He ate at the kitchen sink without tasting anything. The dream had not been a dream. It had been a memory, pushed down by time, inconsequential in the moment. Seth had pitched that Tarot card into the wastebasket as soon as he had stepped inside, chalking Ben’s uncharacteristically maudlin display up to grief over his friend. Now he realized who that friend must have been. Thomas Sullivan. Leaving his bowl in the sink, Seth tiptoed down to the basement. Poe was curled up on J.J.’s neatly-made cot, which clearly had not been slept in. “Tell him to come home,” Seth said. Poe meowed like she wasn’t making any promises. When he got outside, Marshall was waiting on him in the driveway, wearing sweats and a skullcap and light knit gloves. In silence they jogged down Kings Lane, preoccupied with their individual problems. Winter’s fist was loosening; a few eager shoots of green grass poked up along the fencerows, and their breaths no longer vapored in the air. Seth wondered if summers in Indiana were as sweltering as summers in Pennsylvania. He hoped he would be around to find out. “How are things at home?” he asked. “Dad and I aren’t speaking,” Marshall said, “so, better. He did lift my grounding for me to go to the library this afternoon.” 123 “Library” being code for “Fort King.” Marshall was now officially apprenticing with Aphrodisia, getting a jumpstart on med school. Seth told him J.J.’s suggestion that he work with Xanthe. “I’m not sure I want to,” he confessed, as they finished their cooldown. “If you don’t want to, then don’t.” “Oh sure, make it sound all easy.” Marshall grinned. They parted ways with promises to see each other that evening. It was Saturday, and Dr. Townsend was pulling yet another double shift at the hospital. As Seth jogged up the drive, he noticed a black sedan parked across the street, in front of Captain McLain’s. Unless he was getting paranoid, it looked like the same one he had seen parked in the teacher’s lot at school. What would one of his teachers be doing at Will McLain’s house in the predawn hours? Ingrid McLain, his aunt, drove a Prius. Maybe he’s dating Miss Janowitz, Seth thought. He quickened his pace to the front door all the same. *** Seth mused on the Xanthe conundrum in the Jacuzzi, where he did his best thinking. Saying no to training with Xanthe was not as straightforward as Marshall made it sound. Saying no to Xanthe meant saying no to J.J. What freaked Seth out about Xanthe? He slid down in the tub, turning the water off with the side of his foot. He supposed it was how Xanthe had introduced himself, reaching into Seth’s mind uninvited, plucking whatever dreams and memories he wanted from the gray matter. If he did that again, he could easily stumble across the fact that Marshall had helped the Black Swan escape. Agathon had sworn to tell no one, even his fellow members of the Alpha Clan, that secret. But Xanthe gave Seth the creeps for other reasons. Aphrodisia might have X-rayed him, but Xanthe had been the one to look inside of Seth and reveal a secret even Seth hadn’t known: The Black Swan had been sending him dreams about Lemuria. 124 At precisely nine o’clock, a horn honked in the Stewards’ driveway. Seth grabbed his letterman’s jacket and bounded out the front door to Jack’s Beamer, hoping to make a getaway before Leigh woke up and spotted them out her window. Jack looked more like his old self today in gray slacks and a navy sweater. Seth looked for the sedan, but the street was empty. Little was said on the drive across town to the Barnes and Noble. In the café, Jack ordered them coffee and muffins. Seth cornered J.J.’s favorite table in the black, with a clear view of the store. Jack took a manila file folder from his briefcase and placed it on the table. He left his hand palm-down on top of it. “Here’s what I found on Tommy,” he said, getting straight to it. A trait of his Seth appreciated. “He was born in captivity. His mother was a werelynx, a warrior breed, part of Chimera’s breeding program. He was taken from her as soon as he presented – ” “Skinned,” Seth said. “We call it skinned.” Speak the lingo, dude. “Once he skinned,” Jack corrected himself. “His mother was sent back to the Scholae Bestiarii. Her name was Ruth. She was fourteen years old.” Seth regretted the bite of muffin he had just swallowed as his stomach clenched. Fourteen years old, raised up to be a killer, bred out like a prize sow. Sickening. “His father?” “That’s where it gets a little strange.” Jack leaned in, lowering his voice. The café was busy, most of the tables around them full. The barista, a surfer-blonde chick, was looking harassed. “I have to tell you, General Burke was very reluctant to release these records to me. I had to make some campaign promises I may regret once I’m in office just to get my hands on them, and I did not tell him I would be showing them to you. You must be very careful who you share this information with, for your own safety, and theirs. All right?” Seth nodded. Jack sat back, absently stroking his goatee. “The Gen-3 werekin, the generation that included your father and Regent, were the only generation of werekin, apart from the Gen-0 and the Gen-1 of course, to have no fathers listed in their files. You know the Gen-0s were grown in test tubes, using genetic material from the Ark, with no human contribution. When that experiment failed, human mothers were fertilized with werekin DNA from the 125 Ark, and nine months later, the Gen-1s were born. It seems the procedure was repeated for the Gen-3s, only with werekin mothers instead of human mothers.” Seth tipped his chair back, testing the limits of its balance. “You’re saying LeRoi mixed werekin DNA with DNA straight from the Ark?” “Chimera refers to the project as ‘The Ovid Experiment.’ I imagine it was an attempt to birth the Black Swan. LeRoi was determined from the outset of Project Ark to raise Lemuria. But it didn’t work. The Gen-3 showed no more special abilities than the Gen-1 or the Gen-2, nor did their offspring, except for you and your brother – who are, by the way, the only known offspring of a Gen-3 born to a human mother.” The legs of Seth’s chair came down with a click. People continued to bustle around them, but he felt as though he had been transported somewhere far away from the world of non-fat lattes and half-price sales. “You think that’s why J.J. and I are werejaguars? Why J.J. is telepathic and prescient?” “It is possible you share a greater connection to the Totems than other werekin,” Jack said. Seth thought of J.J., telling him he was more powerful than he knew. How much of this had Thomas Sullivan known, he wondered? How much of it had he told Lydia? Jack slid a page out of the envelope and passed it to Seth. It was an approval form, signed by Ursula LeRoi, granting Thomas Sullivan permission to leave the Chimera facility where he had been raised and take up residence in the human world. It read like a legal contract, making it plain that Thomas remained Chimera Enterprises’ property, and requiring him to present himself and any offspring he might sire to Chimera immediately if summoned. “So he was free,” Seth said, softly. “If it hadn’t been for me and J.J., Dad could have led a normal life.” “I wouldn’t say a werekin life is ever ‘normal,’” Jack said, not unkindly. “I just mean he went to college. Got married. Bought a house. That’s normal stuff,” Seth said. “It is.” Jack was studying Seth at an angle. What did he see? A seventeen-year-old punk with dyed hair growing out ragged, eaten down to muscle and bone? The reason his picture-perfect suburban 126 life had been turned inside-out? “Is that something you would like, do you think? College? A career?” “Like that’ll ever happen,” Seth snorted. “None of us can predict the future, Seth. That doesn’t mean you aren’t allowed to have dreams.” Jack adopted his matter-offact tone. “Have you considered what you might study, were you to apply to college?” Completely thrown, Seth blurted out the first thing that came to mind. “Languages, maybe.” Could you study languages? Was that a dumb thing to say? Apparently it was not. Jack nodded agreeably. “Yes, I understand from Ingrid that you have a facility in that area. What is it you speak?” “French, Italian, Spanish, Russian.” A little Lemurian. “I can look into schools with notable foreign language programs. Of course you’d want to do a semester abroad,” Jack said. Seth nodded. Sure. Why not? Dream big, he always said. “And I assume you’ll be trying for an athletic scholarship?” They were really having this conversation. He and Jack were having The College Talk. “Sure,” Seth said, playing along until he figured out Jack’s angle here. He would have one. Seth just had to pin it down. “Where is Marshall applying?” Seth choked on lukewarm coffee. “You know about that?” “I know Marshall is important to you,” Jack said, carefully. “I assume where he decides to attend college will affect your decision. Anything else is, obviously, none of my business.” Jack folded his muffin paper up, very neatly, into a triangle. Words escaped Seth. Jack Steward knew his step-son was gay, and did not mind. Huh. “What about this Ovid Experiment?” he asked, primarily to turn the subject from his love life, and The Future. “Did Chimera give up on the experiment after the Gen-3s?” Jack looked down at the envelope. Seth had a feeling he would not like what came next. “Dre Alfaro was hard-put to decode the files on this. Ursula LeRoi guarded the Ovid research as jealously as she guarded the location of the Ark. You see, it concerns the Partners.” “I’ve never really understood what that means,” Seth said. “‘The Partners.’” 127 “Partners,” Jack said, “are investors in Chimera Enterprises. The scientists, politicians, military liaisons, and various businesspeople that made Chimera’s top-secret operations possible, right down to the trucking companies that helped ship collared werekin around the country to Chimera laboratories. You’ve seen many of them before. They were at our house on New Year’s Eve, and at Fort King, celebrating the capture of the Black Swan, the night you met McLain.” Seth remembered. Middle-aged men and women, elegantly dressed, toasting Ursula LeRoi’s triumph. “What did the Ovid Experiment have to do with them?” “The Gen-3 experiment built on Elijah Bishop’s advancements in human cloning. Since it did not produce a Black Swan, it was considered a failure. The project was scrapped after the Gen-3. Eighteen years ago, it was revived, though in a – different fashion.” Jack cleared his throat. “Understand, Seth, this has nothing to do with your ancestry.” With your ancestry, he said. He did not say it had nothing to do with Seth. He lifted his fingers off the file folder. Seth picked it up. The first page was crammed with complex equations and geneticist jargon. Seth was no Healer, but he recognized some of his Bio vocabulary words, gamete, allele, homozygous, enough to get the gist, and turned the page. He was looking at a headshot of a boy. A boy with carefullycoifed blonde hair and sea-green eyes. CAMERON ANDREW FOSS was printed next to it, along with a date of birth, a height and weight, a serial number; below that was a double helix, and a catalog of genetic markers. With trembling fingers, Seth flipped the page. Another photograph, another name. Gabriel Matthew Cochran. And on the next: Bryce Emmanuel Heilsdale. Then Yena Sun Lee; Christopher James Simmons III; Shanti Marie Bruce; and on, and on, names and faces Seth recognized from the halls of Fairfax High, until the last: Marshall Jason Townsend. The page fluttered to the floor. Jack leaned over hurriedly to pick it up, shooting an anxious glance around the café. The blonde barista smiled at him as she wiped down the condiment counter nearby. 128 “And none of them know?” Seth croaked. “What they are, none of them know?” Jack shook his head. A horrible thought occurred to Seth. “Leigh. Is Leigh – ” “She’s mine,” Jack said, firmly. “Mine and Lydia’s.” Seth was reeling. He felt his claws slide out, stuffed his hands under his knees. “Everyone we know – everyone we live around – Dr. Foss, and Dr. Townsend, Mr. and Mrs. Heilsdale…They’re all part of this?” “To greater or lesser degrees. Some of them have more influence, and more knowledge, than others. An undertaking of the magnitude of Project Ark could not have been accomplished without the cooperation of many, many people, but LeRoi was always careful about how she parsed information. Chimera is a strictly need-to-know organization. For anyone who tried to find out more than they needed to know, like my father, the consequences were dire.” “So Dr. Townsend knows I’m a werekin? He knows Marshall is a – a – ” Seth couldn’t say it. He gestured instead at the papers resting under Jack’s folded hands. Jack tucked them back into the envelope, and slipped the envelope back into his briefcase. “Wesley Townsend was one of Chimera Enterprises’ most celebrated medical minds. Resurrecting the Ovid Experiment was largely his idea.” “Why isn’t he locked up then?” Seth was breathing hard. The magic threatened to take hold of him, stinging up and down his spine like he had fallen into a patch of nettles. “Because in the eyes of the law, he has committed no crimes,” Jack said. “Project Ark was, until a week ago, a fully sanctioned government operation. Wesley’s involvement with them was no more illegal than mine. Once LeRoi fled from Fort King and went rogue, the Partners disavowed her. Wesley was the one who handed these files over to Captain McLain. He has cooperated fully with Operation Swan Song, his only request being that we keep the experiment classified.” Jack paused. “Seth, obviously this information is very sensitive. It could change a lot of people’s lives. Not even J.J. has clearance to view it. You need to think long and hard before you decide to share it with anyone.” 129 Seth looked up at him. “You’re saying I shouldn’t tell Marshall?” “No.” Jack’s gray eyes were unexpectedly kind. “I’m saying before you do anything, you need to be sure it is the right thing to do.” 130 Chapter Eleven: Betrayal From Haven Heights to Castle Estates was twelve miles as the crow flies. Dre Alfaro had never liked that expression. Why did crows get all the action? Why not as the sparrow flies, or the hummingbird flies, or the falcon flies? It was speciesist. The small brown falcon lighted on the roof of the three-car garage, fixing quick, dark eyes on the red brick house at 706 Kings Lane. Birds had been used as spies by Chimera Enterprises since the days of the Gen-1. The Resistance had picked up the trick from them. Jaguars, tigers, hyenas, and wolves made great warriors, but they caused a panic if they appeared on quiet suburban avenues; wererabbits and weremice and weresnakes were less conspicuous, but got treated like common household pests if discovered, run off or poisoned or trapped. Nobody noticed one more bird hanging around. Birds were always just there, in the background, about as interesting as clouds. No one, however, had ordered Dre to set up surveillance on the Steward-Sullivan household. Dre had taken the assignment upon himself from the first day Seth had arrived in Fairfax. Ursula LeRoi knew this was the home of her second-biggest prize – the blood of the Jaguar Clan. Dre had been sure it would be a temptation she couldn’t resist, and he had been proven right, when Werner Regent had kidnapped Lydia Steward to draw Seth into a trap. He had kept up the surveillance, quietly, ever since. There might have been other reasons Dre didn’t mind hanging around the Steward house. As he was eyeing a worm wriggling up beside Mrs. Steward’s rosebushes, the back door opened, and that reason appeared. The first time Dre had seen Leigh Steward, he had thought her the prettiest girl in the world. Auburn curls framing porcelain cheeks. Slender balletic build. She almost looked like she could fly, she was so light and quick on her feet. She had been sitting in the Fairfax High cafeteria, looking awed to be a ninth-grader invited to eat lunch with the popular kids. Dre had tripped over his own feet staring at her. She hadn’t even looked up at him. 131 This morning Leigh had on brown tights and a green dress, like a tree nymph. Bryce Heilsdale followed her out of the house, limping slightly, shrugged deep into his blue-and-gold letterman’s jacket. Leigh was toying with the links of the charm bracelet he had given her. “…asked Yena,” Bryce was saying. Dre’s werekin hearing easily picked out the words even from the garage. “It’s fine, Bryce. Really.” Leigh sat down on the railing. Her back was to Dre. The falcon picked his way along the gutter, angling for a better view. Bryce looked miserable. “It was at Christmas, before you and I were even talking. I wouldn’t have asked her if…I thought you’d go with Marshall. But we’re just friends,” he rushed on. “Yena knows I – I really like you, Leigh.” The falcon ruffled his feathers. “Maybe I could talk to her. Yena is cool, she’d understand – ” “Bryce, you can’t uninvite a girl to prom. It’s cruel.” Leigh slipped her fingers out of Bryce’s. “Anyway, it’s not like I’m your girlfriend or anything.” Bryce’s shoulders slumped. They talked a while longer, mostly about basketball. Leigh didn’t seem that enthusiastic. When Bryce finally left, Leigh turned around, delicate hands gripping the railing. After a moment, she yanked the charm bracelet viciously off her wrist, popping the clasp, and shoved it into the pocket of her dress before she disappeared inside. Dre soared down to the railing. He almost skinned and knocked on the door to ask if she was okay, but at the last minute remembered he was supposed to be ignoring her, to make her notice him. Instead, he fluttered down to the ground, sharp beak poised over the hole he had seen the worm wriggling through – A flash of something caught his eye. Resting in the shade of the porch, where it must have fallen when Leigh had yanked her bracelet off, was a gold basketball charm. Dre cocked his head. There was no sunlight down here; they were shaded by the porch and the rosebushes. What had flashed? He hopped closer – and hopped back as it flashed again. A pinpoint of green light was pulsing inside the charm. Dre picked it up in his beak – it emitted a faint, electronic hum – and 132 crunched down like he was splitting open a seed. The charm broke open, and a delicate spiral of green circuits and copper wires spilled out into the grass. The falcon tucked the mess under one black-quilled wing and hopped away from the porch, into the Stewards’ garage, just as a black BMW turned into the drive. There, Dre skinned, turned the charm over, and stared at the engraving on the back – a tiny glyph. “Houston,” Dre said, to himself, “we have a problem.” ** The drive back to Castle Estates was less awkward now that the ice had thawed a bit. Seth messed with the radio, scanning past the classical pre-sets in search of some decent tuneage. “So you decided to go ahead with your campaign?” he asked, as they passed a VOTE STEWARD sign in the Lees’ front yard. “I think I could do some good in the Senate,” Jack said. The Beamer eased up the Stewards’ drive and stopped beside the mailbox. Seth suddenly felt the urge to escape. There was such longing in Jack’s eyes as he stared at his old house, but Seth had nothing to give this man. He wasn’t his child. Quickly, he unbuckled his seatbelt. “Well, thanks again, Mr. Steward, for looking into my dad and…everything.” “You don’t need to thank me,” Jack said. Right, Seth thought. He was too damn polite. “So I’ll call you when I have that list of colleges?” “You don’t have to,” Seth said. “I mean, don’t put yourself out or anything.” “I don’t mind,” Jack said. “In fact, I was wondering if you would mind if I came to your game.” Okay. Seth was not stupid. He knew Jack had an endgame here, and he had had his emotional chain yanked quite enough by Regent. “Look, Jack,” he said, flatly. “You can make nice with me all you want, but it won’t change things. I can’t convince Mom to forgive you. I can’t convince Leigh to forgive you. You lied to them both for a really, really long time, and even if I forgave you, which I’m not saying I ever would, they – ” “Seth. Please.” 133 Jack spoke through bloodless lips. He sounded so desolate Seth shut up, watching as Jack’s hand dipped under the seat. He came up with a pistol. A Glock .9 millimeter, semiautomatic. Seth could smell the silver in the bullets. He was too stunned even to skin. This was it? This was Jack’s endgame? He had orchestrated this father-son drama, bought Seth a muffin and shared top-secret intel with him and pretended to care about his future, just so he could splatter his brains on his mother’s mailbox? As revenge scenarios went, this one definitely won the award for Most Twisted. “When I tell you to,” Jack said, “I want you to run.” The words lodged in Seth’s brain one at a time. Jack wanted him to run? He wanted the pleasure of shooting him in the back? What? “Run for the woods,” Jack said. “As fast as you can. Don’t stop until you reach Fort King.” Seth forced his eyes up from the gun. Jack was not looking at him. His eyes were locked on the rearview mirror. Seth turned. Parked behind them, blocking the drive, was a dark sedan. Seth recognized it; it was the vehicle that had been parked in the teacher’s lot at school, then outside McLain’s house earlier that morning. A man was climbing out of the driver’s side. He came together slowly, like a jigsaw puzzle taking shape in the bright wash of midday light. Broad shoulders, heavy with muscle beneath a wool overcoat. Ginger hair capped by a black bowler hat. Red beard striped white. “Jack, if I leave you here, he’ll kill you,” Seth said. “Not,” said Jack, “if I kill him first.” It was the way he said it, without a shred of remorse, that made Seth take a second look at his step-father, scraping aside the patina of refinement like he was scraping paint off an old canvas. What he saw, underneath, was a man who had sold his soul for wealth and power. It took a certain amount of inner darkness to do that, even if you were young and didn’t know the full extent of what you were avowing yourself to. Over the last twenty years, that darkness had bloomed inside Jack, a weed burgeoning through the tracery of his veins, taking root deep within; he hid it well, behind his tailored clothes and cultured tastes, but it was there. 134 Jack Steward was a killer. A fist rapped on the Beamer’s window. “Open up, Jackie,” Regent growled. “Now!” Jack yelled. Seth bolted. He kicked open the door – skinned as his feet hit the driveway – blurred past the garage, a blaze of tawny fur and black spots – and vaulted over the brick fence, touching down on his paws amongst the trees. Shots rang out behind him, shattering the quiet. Seth’s heart squeezed inside his snowy chest. With every passing second he expected to hear a roar at his back. Surely Regent had evaded Jack. Hopefully he wouldn’t waste time mauling him. That was why Seth had run: Regent was in Fairfax for him, not Jack. Regent was far too disciplined to let his prey escape just to settle a score with an old friend. Would Regent be alone? Probably not; he might have been LeRoi’s “most industrious warrior,” but LeRoi left little to chance. She wouldn’t send Regent to collar Seth without backup. More than ever Seth wished for telepathy. A way to warn J.J., so he wouldn’t come home. Xanthe could contact him, he thought, if only he could reach the fort – A gentle valley opened up, ringed by close-packed trees. Moldering leaves carpeted the spongy forest floor, thickest in the valley’s center. Some deep, instinctual part of Seth noted that this was a perfect spot for an ambush. He almost circled around, but just then a branch snapped a half-mile behind him. Someone was in pursuit. Pouring on a burst of speed, the jaguar streaked into the valley. His paws sank into the leaves, and kept on sinking. Where there should have been ground was only air. Seth tumbled, head over tail, through empty space, roaring. He landed on his paws, fifteen feet down, water spraying around him, soaking his fur; he was standing in ankle-deep, brackish water. For a moment, he crouched there, panting, fear alive inside of him. He had fallen into a pit. A hunter’s trap. Think, Seth. You can get out of this. Just think. The trap was not necessarily meant for him. Chimera had been trapping werekin around Fort King for years; the pit could have been dug at any time, by hunters hoping to get lucky and catch a 135 werekin running in the woods. Most werekin breeds would have been stuck down here, waiting for a hunter to pull them out. Jaguars were not most breeds. Roots like thick ropes were encased in the earthen walls. Seth coiled his legs, poised to spring as high as he could, meaning to sink his claws into the roots and climb out; but before he had taken a step, something black shot up out of the water, wrapping around his middle. The net Seth had unwittingly been standing on pulled tight, rising from the pit with him wrapped inside of it. He tore at it with his claws and his teeth as he rocketed upward, but his tongue began to burn, and soon his whole body was on fire – silver powder, Seth realized, with mounting panic. The net was dusted with silver powder… Roars changed over to screams. Forced by pain back into his human skin, Seth thrashed helplessly. The powder was eating his skin like acid. He was only half-aware of the net soaring into the lowest boughs of a hickory and catching there, swinging crazily, showing him slices of cloudless sky, finger-like branches, brown grass. Blood dripped onto the carpet of leaves beneath him. Seth curled into a ball, trying to curl into himself, the fire in his skin so agonizing he didn’t even think of ducking as the axe hurtled toward him. It struck the branch the net was dangling from. With a crack, the branch snapped in half, and Seth spilled out of the net, choking on vomit and blood. The ground rushed up to meet him, and he landed in the dark. *** “Sorry about that, kitten,” someone purred. Hands – callused, the nails sharp as talons – forced Seth’s chin up. He moaned. Fiery ribbons twined his arms and legs; his mouth tasted of silver and blood. Weakly, he turned his head enough to spit. He was looking into an angular, suntanned face curtained by a lot of sun-bleached blonde hair. Seth blinked. Something about her was familiar. 136 Behind her, a patch of blue sky was darkening to violet. Sunset. Seth had been out for half a day. Was anyone looking for him? Doubtful. He hadn’t been specific about his plans for the day, since he hadn’t wanted Lydia to know he was meeting Jack. Jack. Seth’s chest felt heavy. Had he survived his encounter with Regent? Where was Regent now? Stay calm, Seth told himself, and think. Blink by blink, the cobwebs cleared from his mind. He was lying spread-eagle at the base of a hickory, roughly twenty yards from the pit he had fallen into – unbound, but too wrecked to present much of a threat. His letterman’s jacket had been draped over him like a blanket. It and his jeans had afforded some protection from the silver powder. The burns, though excruciating, were superficial. Likely they wouldn’t scar. Assuming he lived long enough to heal. The hunter (what else could she be?) was in her early twenties, athletically built, poured into low-slung jeans and a black T-shirt. Strapped to her belt were the usual hunter’s tools: combat-grade KBar knife, braided leather whip tipped with silver spikes, ammo pouch. A rifle was propped against the hickory. A tranq gun. Her masters at Chimera wanted Seth alive so they could add his blood to the Ark. The Ark, which was currently housed at Fort King, under the protection of a few dozen Marines and the werekin Resistance. Seth would have liked to know how was LeRoi planning on overcoming that little problem. The hunter was speaking into a comm., one of those James Bond devices that fit invisibly in her ear canal. Hunters always worked in pairs; she would be reporting in to her partner. “Regent,” Seth rasped. His mouth was bone-dry, his throat scraped raw. “Where’s Regent?” The hunter turned to him. Recognition jolted Seth. He had seen her before, that very morning, as a matter of fact. She had poured his coffee in the café. “You’ll have to speak up, kitten,” Blondie said. Seth worked up enough saliva to swallow. “Where’s Regent?” “You mean Werner Regent?” Blondie looked surprised. “I don’t work for him.” She was lying, of course. 137 Kneeling, Blondie tipped a glass phial to Seth’s lips. He twisted feebly away, afraid she would poison him, but she forced his head back on his neck, her fingers wrapped up in his hair, until his lips parted in a gasp. Half the potion sloshed down his shirtfront. The half that slid down his throat tasted so rancid Seth gagged. Immediately, the fire in his skin cooled. Recognizing the effects of healing potion, Seth licked his lips, wishing he hadn’t wasted so much of it. “That’s right, kitten,” Blondie purred. “Take your medicine.” She brushed her thumb across the tattoos below his eye. “Not the kitten I came here for, but my, you are a pretty one. Don’t fight me and you can stay that way, okay?” Agreeing seemed wisest. Seth nodded. “Good boy,” Blondie approved. Like he was a well-trained pet. Seth had news for her. Jaguars did not housebreak. Blondie walked away, talking into her comm. Seth eavesdropped as strength trickled back into his body. “He’s asking for Regent. Is he still around here? Really. And you didn’t think that was worth mentioning?” Blondie’s blue eyes scanned the forest. She seemed edgy. “Look, it’s done. He’s the one we bagged, so we’ll have to work with it. I’m taking him back to the cabin. Finish up and meet us there.” She tapped her earpiece, ending the communique. “What cabin?” Seth sat up, using the tree for support. Blondie glanced at him. “Are you strong enough to walk?” She was less than three feet away, tranq gun out of reach, knife sheathed. If Seth was ever going to have an opportunity to get his claws into her, this was it. “You know,” he said, “I think I am.” Then he skinned. Magic scalded his veins – but something was terribly, terribly wrong. Halfway into the transformation, pressure built in Seth’s spine; his vertebrae seemed to swell, pushing against his skin like the bones meant to break through; he was slammed back into his human skin, prone at the base of the tree, panting up at the first pale stars of twilight. A booted heel stamped down on his chest. “I don’t need you alive,” Blondie warned. “Try that again, and I’ll use this.” She held up a key. Small. Shiny. Silver. 138 Seth’s hands flew to his throat. An ornate torc circled his neck, etched with glyphs that burned against his fingertips, vibrating with magic. His heart slowed to a painful, gonging throb. He was collared. All werekin lived in terror of that moment. The awfulness of it overwhelmed Seth; he lay as still as if he had been knocked out while Blondie knotted a rope around his wrists, another around his ankles. It was some time before he found the will to speak again. “What did you mean, you don’t need me alive?” he said, his voice practically a croak. “What do you want from me?” “I mean,” said Blondie, “you weren’t the kitten I was trying to collar.” J.J. They were after J.J. The black jaguar ran in these woods all the time, between their house and Cleo’s. Seth had to warn him. He tugged at the ropes as Blondie turned away, reaching for her tranq gun, but she knew her business; the more he pulled, the tighter the bindings became. Something glinted on her wrist, attached to a leather cord. Seth went still again. “You’re Chimera?” Blondie laughed. “You really are innocent, aren’t you, kitten?” She knelt. Dirt-matted hair was hanging in Seth’s eyes; she combed it back, letting her fingernails linger on his cheek. “I don’t work for Chimera,” she informed him, with a touch of haughty pride. “Nor do I work with them.” Seth’s eyes jerked up to meet hers. They were blue as the ocean; he could see his bedraggled self reflected in them. “You mean…you’re Resistance?” “And at last,” said Blondie, “he understands.” “But – ” Seth was flabbergasted. “We’re on the same side, lady! What does the Resistance want with J.J.?” What was the Resistance doing working with hunters? Blondie shrugged. “The location of the Black Swan, for starters. We know he’s in league with LeRoi.” “Right,” Seth spit out, sarcastically. “J.J. is so in league with LeRoi she tried to kill him at Fort King.” At which point, demonstrating his typical lack of a brain-mouth filter, he had to add, “Is this Derek’s latest scheme to avoid getting into a fight? He makes J.J. out to be a traitor, convinces the Commanders not to act 139 on Dre’s intel, and the big bad wolf doesn’t have to worry about being sent into any more battles?” Blondie’s smile was ice. “I hear you have a psychic link with your twin. Does he feel it, when I hurt you?” Seth’s expression answered that for her. She outlined Seth’s lips with one long, blood-red fingernail. “You know the best part about werekin healing powers? You can regenerate indefinitely. Tortures you think you couldn’t possibly live through, you can. The trick is for the torturer to show restraint. To know precisely how far to push the body before it can’t heal itself.” Blondie, Seth was sure, possessed remarkable restraint. “Do you really think your brother won’t surrender the Black Swan to us, to save you?” We are prepared to die; we will fight on the side of the Black Swan. No one adhered to that more staunchly than Jeremy Sullivan. Seth met Blondie’s gaze head-on. “J.J. won’t surrender anything to you,” he said. “But he will carve out your heart and serve it to Derek on a platter. I hope I’m around to see it.” Blondie’s smile twisted in a sneer. She spoke a word in Lemurian, and the collar around Seth’s throat began to glow. The marrow of his bones superheated into molten lava. Seth writhed, screaming, his claw-tipped nails tearing gashes in his neck as he tried, desperately, to pry the collar loose. He couldn’t. Nothing on Earth could remove a collar, except its key. As suddenly as the pain had begun, it ended. Seth hauled air down in wheezing gasps. His windpipe felt bruised. Greenish vomit dribbled over his lips. With her boot, Blondie flipped him onto his back. Seth simply lay there, too exhausted to struggle, looking around at the shadows pooling among the trees that surrounded the valley. He had become aware, as the ringing in his ears faded, of a rustling in the leaves, though the wind was calm. He glanced at Blondie. Her brows were drawn together, one hand on her knife-hilt. She had heard it as well. J.J. Seth called out silently, with his mind. J.J., is that you? No response. But from the top of the hickory, a small brown falcon cackled softly. Blondie either did not hear it or did not mark it. “That’s just a taste of what’s coming to you if you don’t mind your manners,” she said. “Now, we need to get moving. Stand up.” 140 She said this as though there was no question Seth would obey. But collars controlled werekin magic; they did not control you. Cleo had once told Seth he would be difficult to break, having lived his whole life knowing what it meant to be free. He had not really believed her, until now. “I’ve got an idea,” he said. “How about you make me?” Blondie uncoiled her whip. The delight in her smile was cruel. “You asked for it, kitten.” Her wrist flicked; the whip came down, rending the air with a hiss. Seth – who had been whipped once before, and knew what to expect – curled into a ball, arms over his head. The braided leather bit into him once, then twice, then again, and again, the silver barbs gouging quarter-sized holes in his flesh. He lost his fight against the screams and howled, tasting bile and blood in his throat. Blondie laughed. You have to be able to fight in either skin. Equally deadly as man or beast. Through the agony, Seth heard Regent’s voice, and it sparked something inside of him. He rolled over, throwing his bound hands out. The whip curled around his forearm, the barbs sticking in his skin; before the startled hunter could pull it back, Seth closed both hands around the leather, and jerked. Off-balance, Blondie stumbled, lips rounded in surprise. She let go of the whip and Seth lunged again, this time in his human skin, and raked his nails down her arms. She screeched in rage as he rolled past her, coming up on his tiptoes, balanced on the edge of the pit. Baring his teeth in a feral smile, Seth dangled the silver key in front of his face. It was still hooked through the leather cord that had been tied around Blondie’s wrist. Blondie lunged then. For her rifle. Something swooped down from the hickory, cackling furiously. Seth was already turning; he saw a streak of black and orange charge out of the trees, as Blondie threw her arms up, the falcon’s sharp beak gouging at them like the silver barbs had gouged Seth’s flesh. The Bengal tiger leapt off the leafy carpet, swiping his claws at the air. Wings beat in frenzied flight, the small brown falcon trying to soar away – 141 “Dre!” Seth yelled, but he didn’t see if Dre made it. Blondie’s finger had touched the trigger. The tranq dart split the air beside him as he somersaulted backwards, into the pit. 142 Chapter Twelve: Spaces Between It was a long fall. Seth landed face-up in the cold water, a red haze misting his eyesight, momentarily blotting out the circle of night sky above. His shirt was bloody scraps. A distant buzz in his ears told him he had lost a good deal of blood. Electric currents spiked along his scar; these new injuries were taxing his healing powers to the limit. He had to fight to stay awake. Something was clasped in his hand. Seth remembered that it was important. He just couldn’t remember why. It was full dark now. Lydia would be worried. Would she send J.J. to search for him? Stay away, Seth thought. He didn’t want J.J. to be collared, too. Paws thumped into the water. Seth whimpered; powerful arms dead-lifted him off the ground. A voice was growling in his ear. Later, Seth would remember it saying, “It’s over now, cub. It’s over.” He was slung over a shoulder. His bound wrists were looped over a corded neck; a wool overcoat scratched his cheek. At the top, he was shifted to the ground, and more healing potion was poured down his throat. The iron bands around his temples loosened. Seth sighed gratefully. “Hold still, cub.” A knife flashed. The ropes around Seth’s wrists and ankles fell away. Seth licked his lips. “Did you kill Jack?” he asked, his voice as thin and dry as the leaves around them. “No.” Regent picked Seth’s hand up and squeezed it, once. His marbled eyes were very bright in the fading light. “I was busy chasing you.” Seth was more relieved than he had expected to be. “Did he shoot you?” Regent snorted. “Jackie couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn with buckshot.” “He tranqed you once,” Seth reminded him. Regent grunted. “How’d you find me?” “Followed the caterwauling. You were making quite a racket.” 143 Sure, thought Seth, poke fun at the half-dead cub. He looked around. Brown feathers littered the ground, which was spotted with blood – his own, Blondie’s, Dre’s, he didn’t know. He didn’t see any bodies. “What happened to the hunter?” “She ran. Smart girl.” “And Dre?” “That’s the things about birds,” Regent said, dryly. “They fly away.” Seth was relieved. Until he realized Dre’s instinct would be to fly straight back to the nest – Fort King. Straight to Derek Childers and whoever else in the Resistance believed J.J. was part of some dastardly plot to…Seth didn’t know to what. Why would J.J. have turned on LeRoi, freeing the Black Swan, if he was really working for her? Did Derek think J.J. and McLain were running their own game, independent of Chimera Enterprises? Seth was too weak and sick to figure it all out. Regent carried him. He chose a deer path hedged by hickories and elms. Here and there it crossed a stream, a feeder for King’s Creek. Seth floated in a waking stupor, head resting against Regent’s chest. He didn’t know how much time passed before a ramshackle cabin came into view, sheet metal with a wooden porch. On the backside, a stone chimney belched a thin stream of smoke. Bedsprings creaked. Seth forced his eyes open again. Time seemed to be jumping; he didn’t remember coming inside the cabin, but Regent had just placed him on a cot with a spindled brass headboard. Seth huddled there, arms circling his knees, wanting desperately to sleep but knowing he was not out of danger yet. Not by a long shot. The cabin was sparsely furnished. Bed. Straightback chair. Rusted footlocker. Dust covered every surface; grass had sprouted between the plank floorboards. Blondie had mentioned a cabin. Was this her home base? Seth was sure Regent would not be camping out here. He liked his creature comforts too much. A fire was burning in the small hearth. Regent fed scraps of kindling to it, sending a shower of sparks up the chimney. Seth was shaking so hard his teeth chattered – aftereffects of pain. Every time he moved, the collar hugged his throat, a sinister, inescapable weight. 144 “You took the key,” he said, hoarsely. “I had it, when I fell in the pit. You took it from me.” When he had thought Regent was holding his hand, comforting him. Would he never learn? Regent stepped over the bearskin rug in front of the hearth and tossed another phial of healing potion onto the bed. “Drink that. You’ll feel better.” “Drop the paternal bullshit, okay, Regent? I know you want something from me. Just tell me what it is, so I can say no and you can kill me.” “I keep telling you. You’re no good to me dead.” Regent, unruffled, began unloading first-aid supplies from the footlocker. When Seth remained motionless, he glanced over at him, his expression impossible to read in the dark. “I’m not here to hurt you, all right?” Seth did not even slightly believe this, but he downed the phial’s contents anyway. Was it possible to overdose on magic potion? He was already hopped up on Aphrodisia’s strengthening brew; now he felt buzzed, his hands shaking, his pulse skittering. He longed for a sip of water, to rinse the taste of blood and bile from his mouth, but he wouldn’t ask Regent for any favors. At Regent’s command, he stripped off the remnants of his shirt, and Regent went to work on the lash-marks across his stomach with peroxide and gauze. “I would like the My Little Pony BandAids, please,” Seth said. Regent chuckled. “I’ve missed you, cub.” What was Seth supposed to say to that? I’ve missed you, too? He leaned back, bracing his shoulders against the brass spindles. Regent’s gaze flicked to the inflamed scar across his belly, then up to Seth’s face, a question in his tiger’s eyes. Seth drew the blanket over his lap, offering no answers. “So, I’m confused,” he said. “Where is the cavalry to pack me off to a Chimera facility?” “We’ll get to that.” Regent hauled the chair over to Seth’s bedside and lowered onto it, ankle resting on his knee. He had shed his overcoat; his sweater and slacks were mud-stained. “Tell me something, cub. How much do you know about the Black Swan?” Marshall. Seth schooled his features into blankness. Let Regent skin him alive. He would never put LeRoi onto Marshall’s scent. 145 “You’re the traitor who collared her, aren’t you? You tell me about her.” “Here’s what’ll really cook your noodle. I wasn’t even looking for her. I was looking for you.” Regent shifted in his chair. “When Tommy took you Underground, I was ordered to find you. Both of you. LeRoi wanted to study Tommy’s blood, determine if there was a magical connection that could be traced back to the Jaguar Clan. I know Jackie told you about the experiment on the Gen-3. LeRoi wanted to know if the Ovid Experiment had produced better results than she’d believed, albeit with some delay. So I started capturing Resistance fighters. I knew they had helped Tommy escape with you, and I assumed someone in the Resistance would know where he’d holed up. Took me five years, but I finally tracked down someone who did. She said you were living in Harlem. I wasn’t as thorough back then as I am now. I let her go. She ran straight back to Tommy, of course, and before Chimera could collar you, she got you away.” Naomi. He was talking about Naomi Franklin. Seth could not imagine what Regent would have had to do to Naomi to make her betray Thomas, but he wanted to scratch his eyes out for it. “The hunters only bagged Tommy that night. I told LeRoi he would have arranged things so if he was ever collared, he wouldn’t know how to find you, in case he broke under torture. That turned out to be true. But I kept my ear to the ground from then on, collared Resistance fighters whenever the opportunity presented itself, and questioned them about the werejaguar cub. None of them knew anything about you, though once I loosened their tongues, a few told me the Black Swan had been born, and the Resistance was hiding her, with humans. I reported that back to LeRoi. She told me to keep searching, for both of you. “Eventually I realized I was wasting my time. When I managed to collar someone high-ranking enough to know anything useful, they would die before they would tell me anything. I needed a plant, a spy inside the Resistance. I could never have gained access. The Commanders were too suspicious of me.” “Gee,” said Seth. “I wonder why?” Regent grinned, remorseless. “I needed someone loyal to me, someone the Resistance wouldn’t suspect, who could earn his way up through the ranks. Lots of lost young cubs in the Underground 146 looking for homes. I found one to suit my purposes, trained him up, and sent him to the Resistance. Took a few years for him to finagle a command, but you know what they say.” Regent sat back, powerful arms folded across his chest. “Good things come to those who wait.” He was like a fat black spider, sitting back, spinning out webs. “Your spy found me in Philly,” Seth said, “and then he found the Black Swan, is that it?” “You’re not as stupid as you look, cub,” Regent said. “There I was, on the cusp of freedom – real freedom, no strings attached. I was training you up for Chimera, I had collared Ben Schofield, the founder of the Resistance and its most influential Commander, and I was hot on the Black Swan’s trail. I knew the human family she had been living with. I knew the young soldier they had tasked to protect her. I knew her name. Caroline.” By force of will, Seth did not react to this, though in his mind’s eye, he was seeing her – a girl of twelve or thirteen, glossy black hair spilling around her graceful neck, eyes black as coffee against her creamy skin. The Black Swan’s name was Caroline. The name Ben had said. They are coming for you. “Finally I tracked her down,” Regent said, “and delivered her to LeRoi. You were coming along fast. Soon we would have everything we needed to complete the Ark and raise Lemuria.” “Then why torture Cleo?” Seth demanded. “If you were never interested in rescuing J.J., why didn’t you spare her, like you spared Snowman?” “Two reasons.” Regent held up two fingers. “One, that girl didn’t know me, and I could see that was my angle with you. You didn’t really trust me, but if you thought I was helping you save your brother, you would.” Seth looked away, shame creeping up his neck in a prickly flush. He had been so blinded by his desire to rescue J.J. he hadn’t seen through Regent’s lies. “You shouldn’t regret what you were willing to do for your brother,” Regent said, like he could read Seth’s thoughts. “Jeremy is your blood. The two of you are more connected than any other werekin have ever been.” Hyperbole, not Regent’s style. Seth looked up sharply. “There must have been other werekin twins. Not jaguars, maybe, because we’re rare, but there must have been others.” 147 “Once. Only once. The first werekin ever to be born to the Jaguar Clan, on Lemuria, were twins. One light. One dark. The first clan members – direct descendants of the Totems.” The engravings on his sword – two jaguars, one light, one dark; neither good nor evil, both very powerful. Seth remembered the night Regent had presented him with his katana – the night he had told him the myth of the jaguar gods. You’re trying to tell me something, aren’t you? Seth had said; Something about J.J. And Regent had said, Actually, cub, I’m trying to tell you something about you. Seth had lost his breath; cold sweat had gathered under his collar. “You’re saying…What are you saying?” Regent held his gaze. “I’m saying you and your brother are as close to gods as werkein get.” Admittedly, Seth was kind of godlike. But Regent had taken him to the mat a dozen times. Blondie had just whipped his spots off. LeRoi had shot him in the gut. And he was collared, for Christ’s sake. J.J. had been collared for seventeen years. You couldn’t collar a god. “Okaaaay,” Seth said. “Then what was the second reason?” “Well.” Regent scratched his beard. “I didn’t have the Black Swan yet when you dumped that hunter at my door, and I knew your little girlfriend had a connection to Will McLain, the man protecting our prize swan. I thought she might know where he was keeping her, so I pressed her on it. She didn’t know much, just something about New Mexico, but it turned out to be enough.” It was like one of those optical illusions where you looked at a picture of two vases and it became a lady’s face – that was how Seth felt as understanding dawned on him. The silver swan charm Will McLain always wore. The look on his face when he had said the Black Swan didn’t trust anyone in the Resistance. Cleo’s evasiveness when Seth had asked about the captain’s sister. Caroline. Seth pressed his hands against his burning eyes, so tired he wanted to cry. “I want to understand why. Why do you want Chimera to win?” You owe me that much, he didn’t have to say. Regent answered gruffly. “Chimera has already won. I told you that the day we met. The Resistance doesn’t stand a chance against 148 an organization as powerful as Chimera Enterprises. You think even werekin could stand up against the entire United States military? You think every human nation on this planet wouldn’t throw in against us, squashing the alien rebellion? That’s what happened to the werekin on Lemuria, you know.” “We’re winning now,” Seth said. “Hadn’t you heard?” “Has your brother been filling your head with that nonsense? Jeremy knows better. Your big battle accomplished nothing. The Partners haven’t turned their backs on LeRoi. Chimera has hunters out collecting werekin right now. LeRoi will rebuild her army. And even if she doesn’t, do you really believe your new Marine pals, the United States government, will give their permission for an alien species to raise a spaceship from the bottom of the ocean? Do you think human beings would ever risk giving another race that much power? Hell, cub, look at how they kill one another!” I was young and foolish to believe Project Ark was ever anything other than a design to finish what Lemuria’s invaders began millennia ago: to conquer the werekin and harness the power of the Totems for humanity’s dark purposes. And General Burke, Seth couldn’t help remembering, had suggested ending Project Ark by exterminating every werekin in existence. He lifted his chin. “If McLain and his men wanted to kill us, they could do it anytime. What are they waiting for?” “Lemuria,” Regent said, simply. “They want us to raise Lemuria. They want the power of the Totems. Until they raise Lemuria, they can’t be sure they won’t need us. All of us.” Rising from his chair, Regent began to pace. Seth slid down on the pillows. His whole body ached; he felt as raw as he had after being tranqed. With LeRoi’s silver poison still eating away at him, the analogy wasn’t that far off. “Did you ever think it odd that LeRoi insisted on registering even useless breeds like your pal Emery?” Seth bristled. Emery wasn’t useless. But that was beside the point. “Chimera is evil,” he said. “LeRoi likes making us into slaves.” “When you’re a little older, cub, maybe you’ll figure out very few things in this world actually come down to who is ‘good’ and who is ‘evil.’” Regent displayed his brand, four numbers and a Greek letter, marking him as Gen-3. “Chimera marks werekin 149 because these brands draw on the essence of our magic. For decades they have collected us, one of every breed, and added that blood to the Ark. Only werekin magic can raise Lemuria. You need a connection, a strong connection, to all of the Totems to do that. Chimera is missing just one breed now – you. They had your brother, but the Jaguar Clan originated from two Totems, the light jaguar and the dark jaguar. Jeremy’s blood wasn’t enough. Once your blood is added to the Ark, and we add the blood of the Black Swan, we can go home.” Yearning underwrote Regent’s words. Seth had heard it before, when Dre had spoken of Lemuria. He shook his head in disbelief. How could Regent believe LeRoi would ever let him, or any werekin, go home? But the curtain had drawn back from Regent’s eyes, showing Seth that this was the truth as he believed it. “Regent, Ursula LeRoi wants to conquer the world. None of us will be free.” “LeRoi wants to enslave humans, whom I don’t particularly care about. Your friends in the military will either collar or kill every werekin on the planet once they raise Lemuria. I was trained by Marines, cub. I know how they think. LeRoi has other plans. Werekin who defy her will die. Those of us who are loyal will be free, on Lemuria.” Regent turned, looking out the window. A soft, steady rain had begun to fall. “Right now, I’ve fallen out of favor. I was meant to hand you over to LeRoi. Instead, you and your brother freed the Black Swan, captured the Ark, and sent her into hiding. But if I can bring you back to her, I’ll be restored to the fold.” His voice dropped, as though he was talking to himself. “I haven’t come this far to lose in the last lap.” “Fine,” Seth said. If Regent was dumb enough to think LeRoi would set him free, let him find out the hard way how wrong he was. Seth would much rather put his trust in Will McLain. “Good luck. I hope the traitor angle works out for you. But since Chimera doesn’t have the Ark, my blood isn’t going to do LeRoi much good, is it?” “We have plans for retrieving the Ark. Don’t you worry.” Regent stood up, stepping over the bearskin rug as he knelt beside the bed. “War is coming, cub. Real war, not just a battle. I didn’t 150 train you so you could join the Resistance and die in the service of humans. I came back here to take you with me, where you belong.” His hand came up, resting lightly on Seth’s cheek, knuckles like bolts under tufts of reddish-brown fur. Seth looked up into those marbled eyes, and lunged. He had been working up the strength to do it for the last ten minutes, sitting absolutely still, letting Regent talk while he rallied for one last grasp at survival. It was a lesson Regent had drilled into him: mudana no waza. No wasted movements. He hurtled into Regent’s chest, ripping ragged lines down his cheeks with his nails. Grunting, Regent closed one hand around both of Seth’s wrists – Regent had massive hands, each one large enough to span Seth’s skull – and seized him by the belt loops, flipping Seth onto the floor. Splinters landed amidst the dying embers in the fireplace, stirring a shower of sparks, as the chair got kicked into the wall. Regent buried a knee in Seth’s sternum, forcing him to stop squirming. “Did you get that out of your system, cub?” he said. “I hate you,” Seth managed to spit back. Regent chuckled. Straddling Seth’s thighs, he set back on his haunches, keeping Seth’s wrists pinioned in one hand. Seth made himself lie still. Struggling would only waste energy. He would not get off this floor until Regent decided to let him up. Regent’s free hand slipped into his pocket, drawing out the small, silver key. Seth stared at it. Astonishing, that something so tiny could end his life. “I’m proud of you, you know,” Regent said. “Wouldn’t have done my job if you’d just come along quietly. But it’s over now. We’re leaving here, tonight. I’ve got a plane waiting. It’ll take us to LeRoi. You see, cub, you don’t really have a choice here.” “You’re wrong,” Seth said. “I do have a choice. It’s the same choice you had. Maybe you’re right. Maybe we can’t defeat Chimera. Maybe we’ll never be free. But winning isn’t the only reason to fight.” The steel in his voice surprised even him. There was a flicker behind Regent’s impassive eyes. Seth thought it might have been his humanity. 151 He moved to sit up. Regent allowed him, halfway, keeping hold of his wrists. “You still have a choice. You could help us. Join the Resistance. Regent,” Seth said, “you could stay.” *** Seth’s chest was aching like he had run a long way in the cold. Asking Regent to stay, with him, for him, was admitting he didn’t hate him, not all the way down like he should have. He thought of that line from Shakespeare. I will wear my heart upon my sleeve. I am not what I am. Regent had betrayed Thomas. He had killed Naomi. He had captured the Black Swan. Lying on the floor of this filthy cabin, close enough to smell the fresh blood on that bearskin rug, Seth was pretty sure what he had done to Ben. For those things, Seth despised him. But there was no way around the fact that in six weeks, Regent had exerted more influence on Seth’s life than any other adult before him. Naomi had been his protector, his mother, the one who listened to his complaints and patched his old jeans. Ben had been his Papa Bear, always ready with advice, always willing to bail him out of trouble. Ben Schofield and Naomi Franklin had comprised the length and breadth of Seth’s world since he was five years old. Losing Naomi had unmoored him. In a single night Seth had lost the only family, the only home, he had ever known. He had landed in Fairfax on a snowy New Year’s Eve, carrying the debris of his former life in an old gray backpack, and there Regent had been, offering to train him. Like anyone adrift at sea suddenly tossed a lifeline, Seth had clung to him. Until Regent, Seth hadn’t realized he missed more than his dad, the person. He had missing having a dad, period. Someone to knock him upside the head for his numbskull cub shenanigans. Someone to teach him about life, instead of always sheltering him from it. He had been weak. He had been soft. Regent had molded him, shown him he was strong enough to protect himself. Regent had taught him stillness, and for that, Seth would forever be grateful. Deep down he wished for Regent to be what he had claimed to be – a werekin honorably retired from the Arena, a loyal old friend 152 of his dad’s. But Regent had never been those things. He was a liar and a murderer and a traitor, and Seth would not follow him down that path. Between death and enslavement, death was the easy choice. Between saving his own skin and dying for a cause, the choice was grayer. Regent had chosen the former. Seth chose to fight. That lesson he had learned from Thomas, and Naomi, and Ben. Rain struck the roof. Regent blinked, and whatever Seth had seen in his eyes winked out, a candle snuffed by the wind. “All right,” he growled, hauling Seth to his feet. “I see what you’re up to. Quit stalling.” Seth swiped the back of his hand across his eyes, hoping Regent wouldn’t notice. “Stalling for what?” “For your twin. I’m sure your little birdie flew straight to him, if Jackie hadn’t run there already.” Seth had not thought of that, honestly. He glanced out the window, hoping to see a black shape stalking the treetops, but the rectangle of forest he could see was an empty expanse of rainlashed trees. He closed his eyes, willing some dormant telepathic ability to kick in. Regent grunted. “Give it up, cub. That collar disrupts your little mental bridge. But that hunter girlfriend of yours will find that pit sooner or later, and she’ll track us from there. We better get moving.” He bustled about, rifling through the footlocker for supplies: more phials of potion, extra rolls of gauze. He stuffed everything in a duffel bag he pulled from under the cot. Seth curled up submissively on the foot of the bed and watched. Regent seemed to know his way around the place, right down to the envelope of cash stashed under a loose board by the hearth. “Blondie had a partner,” Seth said. “Who’s Blondie?” “That hunter lady. I heard her talking on her comm. She told him to meet us at ‘the cabin.’ She meant this cabin, didn’t she?” Regent said nothing. He was counting out Ben Franklins from the envelope-o’-getaway-cash. “But she swore she wasn’t working with you, and you tried to eat her, so…Help me out here, General. What am I missing?” “As usual, cub, the forest for the trees.” Regent shoved two thousand dollars into his pocket and returned the rest to its hiding 153 place. “All right. We got a walk ahead of us. You need me to carry you?” Seth lowered his head onto his arm. Sleep beckoned, and beyond that, a peace deeper still. If he gave Regent what he wanted – his blood – there was every chance LeRoi would someday succeed in raising Lemuria and conquering the world. Everything Thomas and Naomi had died for would come to nothing. Everyone Seth loved would be a slave. “I told you,” he said. “I won’t give you what you want. I won’t go with you. You know that, or you would have taken this collar off me already.” Seth went on lying there, eyes closed. An invisible cord seemed to connect the collar around his neck to the key in Regent’s hand. He pictured Marshall, standing under the trees along Regent’s drive, telling him he would not change how he felt about him. He vowed to hold onto that memory, no matter how much dying hurt. A hand came down, gently, on his forehead. Regent spoke a word, one simple, burning word, in Lemurian; instantly, an electric band tightened around Seth’s throat, sucking the very essence of his soul into the collar. He arched up off the bed, screaming. There is a kind of pain that undoes a person. Seth wasn’t even aware of sliding off the cot and crawling out the door; of slithering down the rickety steps into the swampy yard; of tearing his nails to bloody shreds as he sank his fingers into the dirt, hauling his body forward. Trying, futilely, to escape. Rain pelted his back. He was belly-down in the muck, inhaling water and mud; drowning seemed like a good option at the moment, so he dropped his face into the puddle, and breathed in. But no; someone grabbed his shoulders and rolled him over, pounding on his back. Light fractured against Seth’s pupils. Ripples moved along the surface of his mind, creating waves across his vision that distorted J.J.’s face…His twin was holding him, rocking him, pouring words into his ear, but all Seth could hear were his own screams. I love you, he wanted to say, but couldn’t. Seth stared up at the stars. Somewhere inside he realized he could not be seeing stars, not really, not through this downpour of rain, and yet there they were. Millions of brilliant, diamond-like 154 stars, close enough he could have plucked them from their velvet fields. Then, miraculously, the pain fell away, and he was leaping amongst the treetops, claws digging into the soft bark of trees taller than any trees on Earth. A brilliant canopy of leaves arched overhead, the colors purer than he could describe: amethyst, coral, saffron, rose. Flowers like jewels dripped from vines woven among the leaves. Far below thundered a river, blue and silver in the golden rays of the sun – for, incredibly, the sun was shining in the night sky, bathing Seth in warmth and light. Here was a jungle that could have existed in only one place. Lemuria. The trees ended in a valley between two lushly green mountains. A pyramid rose up before Seth, carved into the mountainside. Charcoal-colored stone glittered with deposits of mica, giant pillars forming an entrance hung with more of the verdantly hued flowers, like royal flags. Sunning on the pyramid’s wide stone steps were two jaguars, one light, one dark. Like the beings Seth had seen in his dream, they were neither animal nor werekin. They were progenitor. The Totems. Both jaguars turned toward him, roaring as they fused into a single, unspeakably potent force – a blinding flash of magic that crashed into Seth, then through him, melding to the magic in his blood. Power and strength flooded his hollowed-out bones, and Seth threw his head back and roared. In that moment he was human and he was animal, he was light and he was dark: two skins, joined. For the briefest pause that stretched toward eternity, he hovered there, in the space between the worlds. He could see his body lying in the clearing beside the ramshackle cabin, the torc around his neck glowing red-hot. J.J. was cradling him. Cleo was holding them both. Dre and Emery knelt beside them in the mud. Emery was holding his St. Francis medal, lips working in prayer. Regent was not there. He had fled, taking the key to the collar with him. From the place where Seth floated, he could have seen him, but he was no longer interested in Werner Regent. Out of the void he heard a voice, beautiful and strange, soft as wings on the wind. It isn’t finished yet, the Black Swan said. I still need you, Seth. Go back. 155 Chapter Thirteen: The Ark “Cleo,” Seth said, “do I look different to you?” Cleo shifted sideways, cheek resting on her hand. “Maybe a little taller.” “Really?” “No, sweetheart, not really.” Seth stuck his tongue out at her. A mere twelve hours had passed since he had kick-started to life in that rain-soaked clearing, the collar around his neck crumbling away to harmless dust. Even Agathon, who knew as much about werekin magic as anyone, was at a loss to explain that. For Regent had taken the key. Seth had been hoping that miraculously surviving a spell no other werekin ever had might have upped his fearsome factor a bit. Apparently, he was the same old Seth Sullivan. With, however, one notable improvement. He ran his hand over his stomach, marveling at the smooth, flat skin under his palm. The ropy scar across his hipbones had vanished. As though it had never been. He had not been home yet. Hadn’t talked to Lydia or Leigh or Marshall. He had been taken straight from the cabin to the fort for a magical checkup with Aphrodisia. At the time, Seth had felt incredible, magic thrumming in his veins, heart thundering in his chest; his words had tripped over one another as he had described his dream-walk to Lemuria, becoming one with the Jaguar Totems… And then, he had crashed. Like that killer high you get from guzzling a six-pack of Red Bull to chase a bag of Oreos, but when the sugar and caffeine wears off, boom, you’re down for the count. McLain had carried him to the infirmary on the fort’s second floor. Or so Cleo had told him ten minutes ago, when Seth had awoken to her perched on the side of his bed. She had also told him that Lydia, assured of his recovery, had gone home to sleep. J.J. was conferring with the Commanders in an emergency meeting called because of Seth’s collaring. Seth was due to tell his tale once he had showered; dirt was still matted in his hair, and he reeked of sweat and vomit. But he was having trouble getting motivated. Lazing in a patch of winter sunlight 156 pouring through the window above his cot, he was tempted to sneak in another cat-nap. Cleo had stretched out next to him, on the last in a long row of cots. “Tell me again how you found me,” Seth said. A lot about the previous night was still murky. “J.J. and I were here, talking to Xanthe, and Dre came swooping in, chattering about Regent being on your tail. Jack was about two seconds behind him, in his car. We all went looking for you – Melody, Emery, McLain, everybody. We started at your house. It took a while to find your trail, but I happened onto that hunter’s pit, with your jacket next to it. J.J. and I tracked you to the cabin from there.” “And Regent had bonvyaged?” Cleo nodded. “But don’t worry, sweetheart.” Her smile was deadly. “J.J. will find him.” “Bet your ass I will.” Seth’s twin had appeared in the doorway, geared up for battle in familiar black camouflage. Seth wiggled his fingers at him. “I’m being lazy,” he confessed. “You’re allowed, after a scene like that,” J.J. said. He slunk over to the windowsill and stretched out on a patch of sun-warmed wood. Afternoon light turned his golden hair into a halo. He looked wearier than Seth felt – pale around the mouth, pink streaks under his eyes, like he hadn’t slept. According to Cleo, he hadn’t. He and Lydia had held vigil at Seth’s bedside all night. Bet that was evening filled with stimulating conversation, Seth mused. His stomach gurgled, and Cleo hopped up. “I’ll hunt you down some breakfast,” she offered. “I would love eggs,” said Seth. “And bacon. Biscuits, too. With honey, please.” Cleo looked at J.J. “Any requests, monsieur?” “If you’re cooking, I request not to eat.” Seth snickered. Cleo swatted his arm, then leaned in, he thought to kiss his cheek; when her lips grazed his mouth instead, Seth jerked back in surprise. Before he could say anything, Cleo was off the bed and out the door. J.J. turned his head to look out the window. The tautness of his expression made Seth’s stomach feel squirmy. He rolled his 157 shoulders in their sockets, wishing his neck would stop aching. “It’s from the collar,” J.J. said, watching him sidelong in the glass. “My neck still hurts in the mornings.” A stiff neck Seth could handle. Strength was humming in him; he felt healthier than he had since the battle. The silver powder burns and lash-marks, like his scar, had healed overnight. Someone, he assumed Aphrodisia, had removed the bandages from his stomach. Presumably that same someone had dressed him in a dorky white pajama shirt with buttons up the front, patterned with blue moons and yellow stars. It hung off his wrists and past his knees. Seth thought he looked like Oliver Twist, filthy and ragged in his too-large nightshirt. Emery had kindly volunteered an outfit of his for Seth to change into, jeans and a BIKES NOT BOMBS T-shirt. The clothes were draped over the footboard, along with Seth’s letterman’s jacket, rescued from the hunter’s pit by Cleo. Taking a blanket with him, Seth joined J.J. on the windowsill, seated at the opposite end with their legs paralleled. The infirmary opened onto a stone terrace with a metal railing. Looking down on the miles of evergreen trees around the prison, Seth felt a pang of longing for the Lemurian jungle he had run in. “Tell me about Ben,” he said. J.J.’s mouth thinned. “We’re working on the theory that LeRoi’s spy inside the Resistance found out he was headed to Brazil, to check out the Tortoise Clan, and intercepted him. McLain thinks LeRoi may have set Ben up. There may have been information only he could get from the Tortoise Clan, information they would only give a werekin, and she wanted it.” J.J. was obviously editing out the top-secret parts. Seth, as promised, did not mention what Dre had told him about the Source. “We think Werner Regent was the one she sent after him. He usually did her interrogations.” “And Regent killed him?” Seth asked, simply to have it confirmed. “It looks that way,” J.J. said. For a while, Seth was quiet. J.J. kept glancing at him as the tears slid silently from under Seth’s lashes. Did death ever get easier, he wondered, or did each person you lost take another little piece of you with them? 158 Once he had his voice under control again, he asked, “Did you tell the Commanders about Blondie?” “Yes.” J.J. unsheathed the bone-handled dagger from his belt and corkscrewed the tip into the wood beside his knee, burrowing a tiny hole. “Her real name is Druscilla Langford. Derek admitted to giving her the order to collar me.” Cleo would have to pay up. Seth had been right about wolfman. “What are the Commanders doing to him,” Seth asked, “and can I watch?” J.J. extended the hole into a sloping curve – a J. “Nothing,” he said. “They aren’t doing anything to him.” “Nothing? How can they do nothing?” Seth was equal parts astounded and furious. “He tasked a hunter to collar one of our own! He’s a traitor!” “In the eyes of our esteemed Commanders,” said J.J., “he is a patriot. Doing what he thought was best for the cause.” Having added another J beside the first, he sheathed his dagger and met Seth’s gaze levelly. “Druscilla isn’t a hunter. She’s human, like Quinn, born and raised free by werekin parents. Derek would never work with a hunter. He hates them.” “But – he collared me!” “Yeah, but he wasn’t after you. He was after me. And the Commanders don’t trust me. Well, Melody does, but the rest of them are listening to Derek, and he’s convinced I’m the proverbial fox in the henhouse.” “But Regent told me he has a plant inside the Resistance,” Seth insisted. “Obviously it isn’t you. You’re doing everything you can to help us win.” “That’s not how the Commanders see it. They see that I was raised by Ursula LeRoi, as her own son. They see that I was spared when every other suspected werekin traitor inside Chimera was executed. My best friend is a hunter. I incited the battle that freed the Black Swan, and now, no one knows where she is. They see this,” J.J. held up his branded palm, “and they think I’m a traitor. They don’t really care if I’m working for LeRoi or working for Burke, or if LeRoi and Burke are working together. Bottom line, they think I’m loyal to humans over my own kindred.” 159 His tone was bald, but Seth was angry enough for the both of them. “I still don’t understand. What do they think Burke’s endgame is?” “I’m not sure they know. But they know McLain is trying to convince all of the werekin in the Underground to come out of hiding, and that feels a lot like asking them to be registered with a whole new set of human masters. They know Burke once lobbied to have us all destroyed, along with the Ark. Even if they trust McLain – which most of them don’t – they know the chain of command. Ultimately, McLain won’t make the call on what happens to werekin. If the Black Swan were here, to speak up for the alliance, the Commanders would listen, but she’s not, so…” J.J. shrugged. Seth threw his hands up. “So what? We’re stuck dancing to the same old tune – do nothing while Chimera grows stronger?” “Sounds like the record they had spinning when I left,” J.J. said. “But Regent made it sound like LeRoi had plans to come after the Ark!” “I’m sure she does,” J.J. said. “LeRoi only answered to the government in name. She had plenty of labs and plenty of technology and plenty of plans they knew nothing about. McLain told me it’s partly why General Burke was so eager to shut Project Ark down. He trusted Bishop, but he never trusted LeRoi. And what’s really disturbing is I think Regent may be right. The Partners may never have disavowed LeRoi.” The hair stood up on the back of Seth’s neck. “You think they’re still working for her?” “I think at least some of them are. You know that bracelet thingie What’s-His-Face gave Leigh for Valentine’s Day?” “Bryce,” Seth said, bewildered. “What about it?” “It was low-jacked. Dre found a tracker and a recording device inside of it.” Seth almost fell off the windowsill. “Bryce bugged our sister?” “Depends. Does Bryce have a PhD in advanced nanotechnology?” “Not that I know of,” said Seth, not to be out-sarcasmed. “Then I’d say we’re dealing with a slightly larger conspiracy here. LeRoi requires her Partners to wear devices like that – that 160 way, she always knows where they are, and she hears every word they say. Puts a kibosh on treachery. The devices are usually hidden in a piece of jewelry.” “Like…a ring?” A memory came back to Seth: Jack, yanking the diamond ring off his pinkie finger, flinging it into the creek in Regent’s jungle enclosure. “A ring could work,” J.J. said. “LeRoi has cornered the market on microfabrication technology. Chimera Enterprises may not have werekin magic on their side, but they have cutting-edge science that could give magic a run for its money.” J.J. tipped his blonde head back, lashes lowering. His eyelids were bruised-looking from fatigue. “It’s like the Commanders don’t see what easy targets we are, just sitting here. We need to stamp out the rest of LeRoi’s laboratories, start running to ground anyone still working for her. Chop the snake’s head off before she strikes again. LeRoi knows that’s what Ben would have been pushing for, and she knows how much influence he had with the Commanders. I’d bet anything she lured him off on his own for the sole purpose of taking him out.” Seth worked the tip of his pinkie in the loop of the J his twin had bored. It was all such a tangled web. “What do you think we should do?” He said “we” like he was part of the Resistance, though he wasn’t. Seth was an eleventh grader, a starter on the varsity basketball team – possibly a jaguar god, one of two, though he had not dropped that bombshell yet. Nor had he mentioned that McLain had been the one protecting the Black Swan. His sister, Caroline. He wasn’t sure why. There was just so much going on right now, so much for everyone to process, so many questions left unanswered. “I think Xanthe should look into everyone’s minds, to see who the spy is,” J.J. said. “I’m assuming you didn’t have many takers for that.” “They aren’t exactly lining up,” J.J. admitted. “Melody wants you and I to go Underground. She says Derek won’t give up. But I told her if LeRoi has found the Tortoise Clan, I’m guessing she’s not interested in sitting around the campfire swapping tales about the werekin ancestors. I’d rather be here, guarding the Ark and looking my enemies in the eye, not hiding somewhere, looking over my shoulder.” 161 Selfishly, Seth was glad J.J. was staying. He sat back against the window. “Do you still want me to talk to the Commanders? Because I will totally blow them off for being pricks to you.” J.J. grinned. “I think you should talk to them. We have to try to make them see reason. Some of the Commanders are talking about splitting off, starting their own revolution.” He scrubbed a hand over his face. “It’s all falling apart,” he said, softly. Seth felt for his twin. Now more than ever they needed to find the spy. Solidify their unity against Chimera before the Resistance, always a fragile network, splintered completely. But how to do that? That was the million dollar question, one Seth could not answer on an empty stomach. He frowned at the clock. “Do you suppose Cleo is raising those eggs into chickens?” he grumped. “She’s probably still working out which is the skillet and which is the saucepan,” J.J. said. They both laughed. Martha Stewart their Cleo was not. Seth began scraping splinters out of the knife-hole with his fingernail, keen to avoid his twin’s eyes. “J.J., I have a question to ask you.” J.J. cocked his finger at him and pulled the trigger. “Shoot.” “Why did you kill Dad?” J.J. went very still. Fort King was never quiet. Footsteps rang out on walkways; buzzers announced the opening of locked doors; somewhere deep, deep within the prison, the Ark hummed. Seth drank in all of these sounds before J.J. said, “Because of you.” Ice, black ice, spilled into Seth’s gut. So that was it. J.J. had hated their father because he had saved Seth, and J.J. had been collared. “Oh,” he managed, softly. “You don’t understand,” J.J. said. “I’m not the first werekin telepath, but I am the first LeRoi allowed to be extensively trained. The others she had dissected, to see how their brains worked. Telepathy, clairvoyance, those are hard gifts to control, since collars can only suppress that kind of magic so far, and we’re only useful to Chimera if they can control us. She let me be trained because Xanthe persuaded her I would be able to find you. “He was right. I could always feel you, inside of me, like someone else sharing my skin.” J.J. placed a thin, scarred hand over his heart. “I never told anyone. I pretended I had no 162 connection to you whatsoever. LeRoi believed it, because she believed I was absolutely loyal to her. If she had ever doubted my loyalty, she would have found a way to force me to tell her what she wanted to know. When she ordered me to kill Dad, I knew, Dad knew, it was the ultimate test. If I hesitated, just for one second, I would have been killing you both. So I did what Dad wanted me to do. I killed him, and saved you.” Now that he had said it, Seth could see it. The flicker in J.J.’s golden eyes when LeRoi had ordered his collar removed. Thomas whispering, I love you, Jeremy Jonathan. The dagger plunging, quickly and painlessly, into his heart. He pulled his knees up to his chest and hugged them. He wanted to say he was sorry, or thank you, but nothing he could think of sounded right, and after a moment, J.J. looked at him. “Seth, if I tell you something, do you promise not to freak out?” Seth really hated conversations that started like that. “Okay,” he said. “What you saw in your O.B.E. – ” “My what?” “O.B.E. Out of Body Experience.” “We are not calling it that,” Seth said. “Not until I get my invitation to appear on Oprah, anyway.” J.J. laughed. It sounded like he had been holding his breath and had just now released it. “Okay. Your call. But the vision you saw, of Lemuria and our Totems. I asked Xanthe if that could have been a dream.” “J.J., I came back to life,” Seth said, impatiently. “No dream does that.” “You weren’t all the way dead. Your heart was beating. I would have known when it stopped.” Almost dying wasn’t portentous enough? Seth quietly fumed. “What did Xanthe think?” “That it was possible Regent reversed the spell. Changed his mind, decided to spare you.” “Sure,” said Seth. “It’s also possible I’ll grow antennae like Agathon’s, but I kind of doubt it.” “Well, Xanthe said we could determine if what you saw was a dream if we peeked into your memories, so…he sort of…did.” 163 Seth was aghast. “Xanthe mind-melded me? Without my permission?” Clearly he and Lizardman needed to have a discussion about boundaries. “We-ell, I might have given him permission, on your behalf. Since you were sleeping.” J.J.’s bottom lip was folded in his teeth, his round eyes slanted past Seth, toward the potions and powders on the infirmary’s shelves. Having never seen J.J. anxious, it took Seth a moment to realize he was worried. Worried his brother was angry with him. Seth was, a little. He didn’t trust Xanthe with an all-access pass to his thoughts. “And?” he demanded. “And he said it wasn’t a dream,” J.J. admitted. “He wasn’t sure what it was, but it wasn’t a dream.” J.J. tucked his chin down on his chest, shoulders squared like he was braced for Seth to shout at him. Seth plucked the pajama shirt away from his chest. “Here’s what I need to know,” he said, sternly. “Whose idea was this?” Startled, J.J. said, “Agathon’s.” “Really?” Seth looked down at himself. Moons and stars seemed kind of pastel, for a necromancer. “You should have seen the one he wanted to loan you. Think satin leopard print, with spaghetti straps and lace on the hem. Cleo thought it was sexy, but I had your back, bro.” Seth really, really hoped J.J. was putting him on. They shared a grin. “J.J., about – about the other thing,” Seth said. “I know Dad was Resistance. Were you, always?” “Yes,” J.J. said. “Always.” “Then, when you told me to save ‘her,’ did you mean Cleo, or the Black Swan? Because…well, I thought maybe you meant Cleo, because you told me not to kill her in the graveyard that first night, and then it was like you were mad at me for handing her over to Regent. You only started talking to me again after I rescued her.” “Yeah, well.” J.J. swept splinters off the windowsill, grinning crookedly. “That was a personal favor. To me.” *** After J.J. went in search of Cleo, and breakfast, Seth finally showered in the infirmary’s tiny, single-stall bathroom. His cell 164 phone was in his jacket pocket, battered but serviceable; he took it out and punched in Jack’s number, studying his reflection in the cracked mirror while it rang. His hair was growing out ragged. It needed a trim. Maybe he should change the color to fit his demigod status. There was this shade of green called Electric Lizard he had wanted to try in Philly… Jack’s voicemail picked up. Seth left a message saying he was okay, in case Jack cared, and inviting him to the sectionals game against Sacred Heart, if he still wanted to come. Lydia had already been clued-in about his play date with Jack. If he was going to be grounded for sneaking around, Seth figured he might as well do the thing properly. As he stepped out of the bathroom in his borrowed threads (the cuffs of Emery’s jeans were rolled up twice), he smelled familiar cologne. Marshall was sitting on his cot, his back to the bathroom door, holding Seth’s jacket and staring out the window. He was wearing a gray Henley and old jeans. Seeing him, in the flesh, sent a jolt through Seth. Marshall’s face had been seared into his mind as his death had loomed, the one possibility for The Future he had most regretted losing. With jaguar stealth, he tiptoed over to the cot. “Philadelphia, Jesus,” Marshall gasped, as Seth threw his arms around him from behind. “You really are a ninja.” “Samurai,” Seth corrected. “Want to see some karate moves?” “Are you asking me to wrestle?” Growling under his breath, Seth forced him down on the pillows, trapped Marshall’s hands in his, and smothered his mouth with kisses. It started off playful, both of them laughing. Then Marshall shifted position, his lips softened under Seth’s, and abruptly, the tenor changed; Seth was transported, lost in midnight blue eyes fringed by dark lashes, a lean body stretched flat beneath his. His hands slid under Marshall’s shirt, up and over his ribs. Marshall called his name softly – “Seth” – on a gasp. Something in his voice undid Seth. He rolled them over, kissing like they were drowning and kisses were oxygen. Marshall’s hands were in Seth’s hair, his mouth pressed so firmly 165 to Seth’s it was almost painful. The words I love you burned on Seth’s lips. Was it too soon to say them? “Ahem.” Marshall sat up, cheeks flaming. Cleo had sauntered in, breakfast tray in hand. Seth glared at her. Food could definitely have waited. “Sorry to intrude,” she said. “I’ll bet,” Marshall muttered, looking at her darkly. Seth glanced at him, but Cleo was not only bearing breakfast. She had also picked up a stray. “Alfaro!” Seth cried. “How’s it shakin’, lil bro?” Angelo Alfaro bumped his fist against Seth’s. Had Aphrodisia been feeding him magical MiracleGro? Seth wondered. If possible, Alfaro had gotten taller, and broader, since Seth had last seen him. His hair was still braided and strung with gold beads, though, and his gap-toothed grin was the same. He sat down on the windowsill J.J. had vandalized and crossed his arms over his chest. “How’s your back?” Seth asked, as Cleo arranged his tray on the cot. “Mostly healed. I’ll be back at school Monday.” Alfaro lifted his Chicago Bulls jersey, twisting around for them to see the patchwork of shiny, sand-dollar size scars across his shoulders and spine. He glanced at Marshall. “What do you think, Doc?” Marshall reached out, tentatively – he and Alfaro didn’t really know one another, because of the whole Haven/Castle divide – and passed a hand clinically over the burns. “We might be able to do something with skin grafts,” he said. “Werekin regeneration is so rapid, the surgery wouldn’t mean that much downtime.” He dropped his hand back into his lap. “I can talk to Aphrodisia, if you want me to.” “Thanks, Doc,” Alfaro said, “but I was never that pretty anyway.” While Seth ate, the others compared notes on his capture, and what they thought the Commanders should do about it. Alfaro had some creative suggestions for what could be done to Derek Childers. Then Seth accompanied Cleo and Alfaro to the rotunda while Marshall headed to the lower levels for his alchemy lesson with Aphrodisia. 166 Seth wondered idly how long the library excuse would work with Dr. Townsend. Thenhe realized Dr. Townsend, if he was handing files over to Operation Swan Song, probably already knew where Marshall was going, and what he was doing at Fort King. Just how long could Seth sit on the secret that Marshall’s father had been neck-deep in Chimera Enterprises’ science projects? How long could he keep Marshall in the dark about what his father had done eighteen years ago – about what Marshall really was? He didn’t get a chance to work out an answer to that. A welcoming party waited on them outside the rotunda’s steel doors: Whitney, arm-in-arm with Emery, who was chewing on his ponytail as usual, and Leigh, faced in the opposite direction from Baby Bird, who was pretending not to notice her, and almost succeeding. “Seth!” Leigh flew at him, squeezing Seth in a hug so tight he squeaked. He supposed the short denim skirt and low-cut pink blouse were for McLain’s benefit. “Is Mom here?” he asked, massaging his ribs. “No. She’s crashed out at home. I got a ride with Marshall.” Leigh rested her hands on Seth’s shoulders. “Aphrodisia said you’re going to be all right now?” Seth nodded. He was one-hundred-percent primetime werejaguar again. His magical Totem bonding had completely overpowered the effects of LeRoi’s silver poisoning. Emery and Dre each clasped Seth’s arm in a gladiator handshake. “Heard you came through for me out there, Baby Bird,” Seth said. “You would have done it for me,” Dre said, bashfully. “How did you know where I – ” Seth started, but the steel doors opened then, and McLain poked his head out. “Seth, we’re ready for you,” he said. Emery steered Seth inside with a hand on his back. “This is total crap,” he muttered. “Derek should be stripped of his Command. Here he is, such a purist about the werekin Resistance he doesn’t even want Captain McLain involved, and he’s sending someone to collar J.J.? Werekin don’t do that to one another.” Regent had collared werekin, Seth thought. He had sent two hunters to Seth’s house to collar him. Hunters with silver swan charms on them – symbols of the Resistance. Lots of cubs out 167 there, looking for homes, Regent had said. And he had found one. Trained one up. For the time being, Seth decided to keep his suspicions to himself. Accusing Derek of working with Regent without proof would only tip his hand. The Commanders were not going to take the word of a cub over the word of another Commander. An oval conference table had been set up in front of the statue of the Black Swan, covered by a red cloth. The Commanders seated around it were engaged in a heated debate. Melody was on her feet, shrilling about the barbarism of Derek’s methods. A fiftyish man in a tweed suit with a thatch of bristly brown hair, a snout-like nose, and stout haunches banged his fist on the table, harrumphing about desperate times and desperate measures. More tables and chairs had been stacked up on the dais across the room. J.J. was perched on one of the tables, walking a quarter across his knuckles and wearing his I-am-so-bored, when-do-wekill-things? expression. Vixen O’Shea had planted her foxy self beside him. The rest of their troop gathered there as McLain hurried Seth forward to the head of the conference table. The chair there was empty. With a pang, Seth thought of Ben. McLain introduced the Commanders. Ben would have made seven, counting Derek and Melody. The youngest, to Seth’s surprise, was sandy-haired, freckle-faced Ozzie Harris, just eighteen and still a senior at Fairfax High, born and raised in the Underground. Ozzie seemed too laidback and groovy to be a warrior, but then again, Seth thought, so did Emery. Josephine O’Shea, Quinn’s mother, was a slender, fiery-haired werefox. She offered Seth a neutral smile when he said hello. Allied with Derek were Logue Ampon and Major Clyde Dowling. Logue was a werecougar, twentyish like Derek, dishwater blonde and lithely built; he had been born in captivity, escaped into the Underground by killing his hunter partner and taking the key to his collar while on a mission. Clyde was a wereboar, and their only official werekin military officer. He had been registered, allowed to live free in the human world, educated at West Point. Clyde scowled openly at Seth as he recounted the previous day’s events. Conscious of his sister in the room, Seth glossed over the gory details. The Commanders understood what it meant to be whipped and collared. 168 Josephine spoke first. “What was done should not have been done. Druscilla should be disciplined – ” “Dru was following orders,” growled Derek. “Besides, you’re assuming she didn’t bag a traitor.” “Hey. Genius.” J.J. came striding across the room. Melody made a sound that was either a squeak of fear or a cry of encouragement as he fell into place beside Seth, glaring at Derek. “Seth was Underground for seventeen years. He knows less about the Resistance than anyone else here. Unless you think our enemies are interested in the high school basketball team’s playbook, I don’t see what he would have to offer Chimera.” Seth raised his chin, trying to look like a dignified ignoramus, anyway. “Besides,” squeaked Melody, “we have the word of Ben Schofield that Seth was trustworthy. His word is good enough for me.” “Me too.” Ozzie dropped Seth a wink, like, Solidarity, brother. “I’m not talking about the last seventeen years,” Derek said, undaunted. “I’m talking about the past two months. Werner Regent collared the Black Swan, and this boy,” he said boy in a way that made Alfaro snort angrily, “was his shadow from the day he arrived in Fairfax. How do we know he wasn’t corrupted? How do we know those two aren’t a matched set of human pets?” Melody’s pink nose was wriggling. “Derek, may I remind you, Seth and J.J. were instrumental in freeing the Black Swan, as, I might add, was Captain McLain – ” “Then where is she? If she’s free, where is she? They know.” Derek pointed at Seth and J.J., silvery eyes dark with hunger. His ears had elongated to points; his voice was more or less a growl. “They’re hiding something. They’re traitors, you mark my words, they’re working for – ” “Don’t you dare talk about my brothers like that!” Derek was so astonished he stopped talking. Leigh had erupted off the dais, ablaze with righteous fury. Emery was chasing after her, tufts of fur sticking out of his ears. Dre just looked awed. “Excuse me,” huffed Clyde, half-rising from his chair. “Who are you?” “A human,” Derek started, scathingly. 169 “I,” declared Leigh, “am Adleigh Jean Steward, Seth and J.J.’s sister.” Like she was representing them. Seth wouldn’t have been surprised if she had whipped out a briefcase and gone Perry Mason on the shocked Commanders. “And you’re right. I am a human. From what I understand, so are all of you, in part. You might try acting like it.” Derek flushed. “This is war. There are exceptions – ” “Yes, I’m aware that you’re at war. This is the very spot where you fought a battle my brothers nearly died helping you win, isn’t it?” Leigh linked her arm through J.J.’s on one side, Seth’s on the other. J.J. was staring at her like she had just skinned. “From where I’m sitting, all you’re doing is pointing fingers at one another while your real enemies gather strength. If I didn’t know better, Mr. Childers, I would think you have a vested interest in stalling this fight.” “Hear, hear,” approved Melody, clapping her small hands. Ozzie murmured something about “bloody well put, love.” “Come along, boys,” Leigh said, turning her brothers away from the table. “You don’t have to stay here and be interrogated.” McLain’s black-coffee eyes were crinkled at the corners, like he was holding back a laugh. “If you’ll excuse us,” he said, to the Commanders, and led them out of the rotunda, leaving the shocked Resistance gaping at their backs. *** “The nerve of those people, calling you and J.J. traitors – whoa.” Leigh pulled up, blinking, as the elevator doors whooshed open onto the lower levels. “Okay. This place is a little creepy.” “You think this is bad,” J.J. said, “you should see the dungeon.” Emery’s ears twitched. “There’s a dungeon?” But J.J. had already brushed by them. Xanthe rose from his couch as his pupil hurried toward him, drawing him aside for a psychic huddle. Leigh stared at them. Xanthe’s tail was curled around J.J.’s feet. “Does that freak you out?” she whispered. 170 “Like you have no idea,” Seth whispered back, and then smiled. From the far end of the room, Agathon was sweeping toward them, wings rustling. “Seth,” he rumbled. “You rested comfortably?” “Slept like the dead,” Seth replied. Necromancer humor. Agathon laughed, a sound like paper crumpling. McLain had left them at the elevator. Leigh walked over to where Dre was giving Whitney the tour, chirping on about alchemists’ mixtures and Lemurian grimoires. Seth leaned against the exam table where Aphrodisia had psychically X-rayed him and said, without preamble, “Agathon, I want to see the Ark.” He had decided this last night. Everything that was happening now had begun with the discovery Elijah Bishop and Ursula LeRoi had made inside Mt. Hokulani: the Ark. That was what they were fighting to protect. Before he made his next move, before he decided what was right, as Jack had said, he needed to see the Ark for himself. Agathon’s flat black eyes drifted to Xanthe, who was watching them like he could hear every word they were saying. “Seth, what you ask is no small request. Few of our kind have seen the Ark. Before he died, our father appointed us, the Alpha Clan, to be its guardians.” “I know,” Seth said. “Elijah Bishop wanted you to have the Ark. Not LeRoi.” “It was our father’s desire to see the werekin freed from their enslavement. To see Earth protected from the destruction the power of the Totems could visit upon it, in the wrong hands – a power that can command wind and wave, land and sea, that can awaken volcanoes and call fire from the sky, even sink entire continents beneath the sea.” Everyone had become quiet, listening to Agathon. “In communicating with the dead, I see across dimensions,” he rumbled quietly. “I have seen many worlds. Enough to know Earth is a special place, blessed with special magic. Our father shared this belief, as do the others of my Clan. “Our father studied the Ark for many years. He believed that only when the power of the Totems once again belonged solely to werekin, only when Lemuria was raised from the depths and the 171 werekin returned to their homeland, would our enslavement end, and Earth be truly safe.” Quinn took a step forward. She had been leaning against the wall with Alfaro. “You’re planning to raise Lemuria, aren’t you?” she said. “With or without General Burke’s approval.” Agathon inclined his head. Yes. Seth drew in a breath. Here, then, was the alien rebellion the humans so greatly feared. Except Agathon wanted to protect humanity, not conquer it. Somehow, Seth doubted Burke would believe that. “Do the Commanders know?” he asked. Agathon shook his head. “Ben Schofield knew. Your father knew. J.J. knows. That is all.” “And Captain McLain?” Seth glanced at Cleo as he said it. “Yes,” Agathon said. “Captain McLain knows.” He turned then, sweeping aside his black robes. “If you would come, I will show you what you wish to see.” A maze of tunnels spoked off from the main room. Seth had imagined the lower level as a spider web; in actuality, it was a beehive, honeycombed with sterile labs, sleeping chambers, and plenty of locked doors. Staircases descended to even deeper levels, wafting up chill puffs of air tainted with the sharp scents of metal and blood. Leigh stuck to Seth’s arm like someone had glued her there. Recessed lights in the tall ceilings grew their shadows to distorted lengths. They shuffled silently past Aphrodisia’s laboratory; she and Marshall were bent over a table that came up to Marshall’s chest, a backdrop of mortars, pestles, phials and canisters on the shelves behind them. A beaker was brewing over an open flame, bubbling with raspberry-colored liquid. Marshall had a white lab coat on over his jeans, a pair of safety glasses stuck on his nose. As they passed, he frowned quizzically at Seth, who smiled, to show him things were cool. At last, after what seemed miles, Agathon halted, at a round metal door crisscrossed with heavy chains and painted with Lemurian glyphs. He raised his hands. The chains retracted, slithering into the walls. Cleo and Seth exchanged a look. Agathon had not spoken the spell to release the wards aloud. Who among them did he not trust? 172 Darkness greeted them, dispelled by a faint glow, like sunlight filtering through water. The room was cavernous, with a sunken floor ringed by a stone ledge, ceilinged by metal beams haired with white roots. Holding tight to Leigh’s icy hand, Seth walked to the railing and peered over, into a rounded pit with smooth, stone sides, like a well. A collective intake of breath swept the room. The hole extended down indefinitely. Growing inside of it were layer upon layer of delicate crystal threads, zigzagged across the pit. It was like looking down into a giant spider web. Seth could feel its pulse, a heartbeat inside an alien womb. Encased in the web, twenty feet down, was a small, champagne-colored orb, exuding traceries of light along the crystal threads like ichor flowing from a god’s heart. The pulse came from the orb. The material was unlike anything Seth had ever seen. The closest comparison would have been sand fused into glass by a lightning strike, dense yet translucent. It was an exact replica of the orb Marshall had held in Seth’s dream. “This is the Ark.” Agathon’s voice was a deep rumble in the reverent silence. “When it is complete, it will contain the magical essence of all werekin. It is our link to the Totems.” “What do you need,” whispered Leigh, “to complete it?” Agathon looked at Seth. Instinctively he backed up, into J.J. His twin steadied him by the arms. They won’t force you, he promised, in Seth’s mind. Trust me. Trusting J.J. was a given. But J.J. was not in charge here. Seth zeroed in on Agathon, acutely aware of Xanthe standing close by. “So it’s my choice? To give you my blood or not give you my blood. It’s my choice?” His tone was defiant, but Agathon simply nodded. The wavering light found all of the hollows in his face; he could have been a statue of an ancient, monstrous god come to life. “It is your blood,” Agathon said. “It is your choice.” 173 Chapter Fourteen: Chapter and Verse The note for Seth to present himself in the gym post-haste arrived during first-period Bio, giving Gideon a chance to sneer about some educators thinking athletics took precedence over academics. Seth wanted to tell him not to take it so personally. Coach would have missed his own funeral for a basketball game. Topher and Gabe were strolling across the court as Seth loped into the gym. They too were wearing Knights’ basketball T-shirts and letterman’s jackets, yet Seth had to try very hard not to see their pictures in one of Ursula LeRoi’s top-secret files, stamped with serial numbers. “Do you know what’s up?” he asked, as Gabe slung an arm around his shoulders. “This will be about Townsend and Foss,” Gabe predicted. Right. Today was the first day Marshall and Cam would both be back at school since the fight, what with Marshall’s suspension and Cam’s rhinoplasty. Coach would be hoping to avoid further bloodshed. The detritus of seasons past littered Coach Evans’ office – team photos and signed basketballs sharing shelf space with motivational titles like Bobby Knight’s memoir and Norman Schwarzkopf’s biography. The aroma was eau de gym sock. Marshall and Cam were already assembled, both glaring at the floor, when the other three tromped in. “Fall in, ladies,” Coach barked at them. His five starters lined up, hands folded at their backs like grunts at attention. Seth ended up between Gabe and Cam. Cam’s nose was a purple lump, winding out feelers of yellow and green across his cheeks. He leaned in, breathing down Seth’s neck. “My, what big eyes you have, kitty-cat.” “My, what a big schnozz you have, grandma,” Seth whispered back. “Foss, Philly, shut your yaps,” Coach snapped. He leaned his knuckles on the desk, glowering at all of them. Coach Evans was a former Marine – boot camp, basketball, it was all the same to him: If you popped off or failed to hustle, you dropped and gave him fifty. “Pay attention, princesses. We have a real chance at a state 174 title this year, if you divas put your personal crap aside and play team ball. But I will not hesitate to bench a single one of you if you step out of line. And if anyone feels they have a score to settle,” his gaze lasered on to Seth and Cam, “I want it understood that the next player to throw a punch will be off my team, permanently. Understood?” “Yes, Coach,” they chorused. “Wonderful. Now get your butts back to class. Philly,” Coach added, “not you.” His teammates filed out. Seth remained, shrugging when Marshall threw him an anxious glance. He didn’t recall committing any bench-worthy offenses. “Take a seat, Sullivan.” Coach motioned Seth into a plastic green chair. He sat down behind his desk, looking stiff and uncomfortable, like they were about to have The Talk. “So.” He cleared his throat. “I understand this disagreement between Townsend and Foss had something to do with you.” Being gay, hung there, unsaid. Seth looked back at Coach evenly. He didn’t care if people knew he was gay. “That’s not the whole story, Coach,” he said. Coach accepted this with a nod. “Foss has issues, I know. Townsend used to do an all right job of keeping him in line, but this year…” He trailed off, waiting for Seth to fill in the blanks. Because he had promised Marshall not to mention the incident with Dr. Foss, Seth did not. “You and Townsend are neighbors, is that right?” “Yes, Coach.” “Ever have any run-ins with his father?” Seth blinked. Did Wesley Townsend having a hand in his creation count as a run-in? “No. Why?” “Because he called me at home this weekend. He’s a member of the school board, you know. He asked me to boot you off the team.” “What?” Seth was too shocked to be angry. “Coach, you can’t! I haven’t done anything!” Coach twisted the string his whistle was threaded through. “He mentioned drugs.” 175 “So drug test me. Give me the cup. I’ll pee in it right now.” A trumped-up history as a cokehead. Just one more gift Seth could thank Werner Regent for. “I reserve the right to do that,” said Coach, “with all of my players. Which is exactly what I told Dr. Townsend when I said I had no intention of cutting you from my team.” As that sank in, a slow smile spread across Seth’s face. Wesley Townsend was Chief of Surgery at Fairfax Memorial. Being stonewalled by a high school basketball coach could not have gone over well with him. “Thanks, Coach,” he said. Coach waved that aside. He looked a little embarrassed by Seth’s gratitude. “You’re a fine ballplayer, Sullivan, and if I’m any judge of character, you’re not a bad kid. Now.” He leaned back in his chair. “Tell me, given any thought to college ball?” *** Seth spent the morning seething. Forget Wesley Townsend’s connections to Chimera Enterprises. He had clearly underestimated the lengths Dr. Townsend would go to to keep Seth away from his son. Their romance was fast becoming an open secret; Seth could see it in the looks they attracted when Marshall stopped by his locker, when they walked to his Audi together after school. Fairfax High had a handful of openly gay couples, among them their wereotter Zoe Campbell and her girlfriend Serena Jensen, all of whom had Seth’s total respect, braving as they did the inevitable graffiti on the bathroom walls and the snide comments in the lunch line. But two popular ballplayers going out? That would be a school first. To tell Marshall or not to tell Marshall, that was the question. Seth stewed on it all during American History and Geometry. By the end of fourth period, after much angst-ridden waffling, he had decided on the not. To tell Marshall about Dr. Townsend’s campaign to have him cut from the team would be straying very close to Dr. Townsend’s involvement with LeRoi. The last thing Seth wanted was to embroil Marshall any deeper than he already was in dangerous werekin politics. Jack had said to be sure what the right thing was before he did anything. Seth had grown up believing it was always better to tell the truth if you 176 could, but in this instance, he wasn’t so sure. How could he tell Marshall the father he idolized wasn’t at all what he thought he was? What Dr. Townsend had done with the Ovid Experiment was cruel, as inhumane as collaring werekin, possibly even worse – “What did Coach want?” Seth actually tripped. His feet had carried him out of Ms. Clark’s Geometry classroom without his brain noticing; he had almost walked straight into Marshall, who had been holding up the wall outside the door. “Indiana,” he protested. “Sorry.” Marshall’s hair was sticking up the way it did when he ran his fingers through it a lot, and his jeans and gray sweater were wrinkled. Marshall was always handsome, but of late, he had been looking less put-together than usual. “I didn’t mean to startle you. I was just – I’ve been worried, all morning.” “It was nothing,” Seth said. “We talked about athletic scholarships. Coach thinks I could play college ball, if I wanted to.” There was truth to that, and Seth, a skilled liar thanks to years of practice in the Underground, skipped right over the rest of his closed-door chat with Coach without batting an eye. Marshall brightened. “Oh,” he said. “Well, cool.” Pizza day had come yet again to Fairfax High. J.J. branched off to the Haven table, where Alfaro was once again in residence; Marshall and Seth waved as they carried their trays over to their usual seats, a healthy distance from Cam and Shanti. Leigh was not sitting next to Bryce. On the drive to school, she had broken the news that he had asked Yena to prom. Ages ago, apparently, but she still seemed miffed. Seth munched his cardboard pizza while everyone else chatted about prom dresses and tux rentals. Cam and Topher both had long-time girlfriends. Gabe had asked one of the smokin’-hot girls’ volleyball players to be his date. Thus everyone was paired up except Seth and Marshall. Seth planned to go stag. Marshall was being pressured on the home front to secure a date – of the female persuasion, of course. Seth considered suggesting he ask Leigh, as a friend. That way she could go, which she was dying to do, and Dr. Townsend might lay off persecuting his son’s boyfriend for a while. 177 He looked across the cafeteria at J.J. His twin was tipped back in his chair, talking very seriously with Dre, most definitely not about prom, or sports, or homework. J.J. chafed at the monotony of their orderly suburban lives. Seth, on the other hand, had embraced the mundanity. He liked being a regular kid. Maybe that was why he had yet to mention their godly potential to his twin, and why he became absorbed in sorting out the lint from his pockets whenever J.J. or Emery referenced the Ark. The pulsating power of that golden orb gave Seth head-to-toe chills. J.J. did not understand his reluctance to lend his blood to the raising of Lemuria, just as he did not understand why Seth preferred studying to soldiering, but so far, he had not pressed the issue. His blood, Agathon had said. His choice. *** After school, Seth camped out in the lawn chair beside J.J.’s cot, MacBook open on his knees, books and papers strewn around him as he compiled his bibliography to his essay on Othello for Miss Janowitz. J.J., lying belly-down on the cot, was sprucing up Seth’s conclusion. Captain Hook was napping on the pillow, back leg twitching like he was chasing rabbits. Poe was eyeing him like she might pounce. Slowly but surely the basement was acquiring J.J.’s stamp. To the tent and army cot he had added the lawn chair for visitors and a quartet of milk crates for storing books, CDs, and weapons. Seth took these as hopeful signs his twin meant to stay in Fairfax. “School is so dull,” J.J. complained, typing two-fingered on his laptop. “I don’t see the point. We just sit there, and the teachers tell us stuff we could read in a book. Nothing happens.” “Stuff happens,” Seth said. “We played basketball in Gym. And you got detention again.” J.J. had picked up the rules of basketball quite quickly, along with a healthy dose of trash-talk courtesy of Topher and Gabe. Unfortunately, when Cam had fouled him, Coach had heard the name J.J. had called him. “Chuck looked better with a broken nose,” J.J. muttered. “Cam,” corrected Seth, peering at the screen over J.J.’s shoulder. “J.J., I don’t think I would use the phrase ‘xenophobic 178 proclivity.’ As a matter of fact, I know I wouldn’t, since I have no idea what it means.” Sighing, J.J. backspaced. “I’m just saying, wouldn’t you rather be training?” “We train,” Seth insisted. “Not this week. You have basketball all this week. And if you weren’t in school, you could work with Xanthe. He’s a great teacher.” Subtle hint that Seth had not yet agreed to study under J.J.’s Gen-0 guru. He shuffled some papers around, avoiding J.J.’s gaze. “What would I learn?” “Divination. Augury. Astral projection.” Meanwhile, Xanthe would be at liberty to paw through Seth’s innermost thoughts. No thank you. “We’ll see after the season is over,” he hedged. J.J. frowned, and Seth was relieved when Lydia summoned them to dinner shortly thereafter. Prior to the initiation of divorce proceedings, meals in the Steward household had been formal affairs in the dining room, around a mahogany table built to seat an army. Now, on the rare occasions they were all home at the same time for meals, they ate in the living room, Lydia in Jack’s old recliner, Leigh on the floor, Seth and J.J. on the couch. Tonight, fresh from a Resistance meeting, Will McLain had joined them. He pulled a chair in from the kitchen and balanced his plate of chicken and jasmine rice on his knees, sipping a Heineken, part of Jack’s old stash. Seth had made up his mind to tell no one, not even J.J., that Caroline McLain was the Black Swan, her older brother Will her protector. Derek might think that meant McLain knew where she was now, and Seth did not trust the Resistance any more than he trusted Chimera at the moment. He hadn’t even told McLain that he knew. Prom was once again the hot topic. Leigh, somewhat to Seth’s surprise, seemed genuinely happy for Whitney to have a date; a mother-daughter shopping spree with the Steward and Townsend women was being planned for the weekend. Dresses, shoes, jewelry. You would have thought they were planning Whitney’s wedding. All Seth had to do was rent a tux. “Who are you inviting, J.J.?” McLain asked. 179 J.J. looked up from his copy of Lord of the Flies. J.J. did not do family time. “I have to go?” “Of course you don’t have to, honey,” Lydia said. “But don’t you want to?” J.J. shrugged. “I wouldn’t know who to ask.” “Invite Cleo,” Seth suggested. “Yeah, I’ll get right on that,” J.J. said. McLain laughed. Cleo in a ball gown was kind of hard to envision. Maybe they could find her something in leather, with a thigh sheath for her dagger. “Whatever, J.J.,” snipped Leigh, though without her usual venom. Since she had taken their part against the Commanders, she and J.J. had declared an unofficial truce. “Cleo is so into you. She looks at you like she wants to rip your clothes off.” Lydia choked. Probably thinking of all the hours J.J. spent training at Cleo’s. Seth was thankful his cell phone rang then and spared them all the awkwardness. He fumbled it from his pocket. “Hello?” “Seth? It’s Jack. How are you?” “I’m good.” Shooting a furtive look at his mother, Seth hurried out through the kitchen into their newly-refurbished backyard. Next door he could hear the thump-bump-swish of Marshall shooting hoops. Bounding onto the brick fence, he cat-walked along the edge. An owl in a nearby tree soared off with a hoot. “I heard Mom kicked you out of Fort King the other night. Don’t you have the same security clearance she does?” “Your mother was in enough turmoil over your condition without me adding to it,” Jack said. A burst of background noise suggested he wasn’t at home. A bar, perhaps? Jack raised his voice over the din. “Listen, I did that research we discussed, into foreign language programs. I’d like to meet soon, to discuss your options.” Thump-bump-swish. Seth matched his steps to the rhythm. Through the kitchen window, he could see Lydia and McLain washing dishes together, laughing. Lydia hadn’t forbidden him to see Jack, but she was not jazzed by the idea. Seth didn’t want to tell Jack that, though. It would hurt his feelings. “I’m really busy right now,” he evaded. “Getting ready for playoffs.” “What about Sunday? I’ll take you for brunch at the country club. Bring Marshall.” Seth sighed. “Let me ask Mom.” So she can say no. 180 He sat down on the fence, enjoying the evening breeze. The weather had turned almost balmy, for February. They talked basketball a while. Jack was planning to come to the Sacred Heart game. Seth would need to prep Lydia for that as well. Divorce was really complicated. Before they hung up, he asked Jack for one more favor. A bit of research. Jack promised to get back with him when he had something. Marshall was measuring a free throw when Seth hopped the shrub-fence. “Hey, Philadelphia. Up for a game of P.I.G.?” Seth shook his head. Content to observe, he slouched against the garage. Marshall in tattered sweats, hair plastered to his scalp, was supremely ogle-worthy. Although he looked exhausted. Seth wondered how long he had been out here. “I hear we’re tux shopping Saturday,” he said. “I was informed.” Marshall’s free throw bounced off the rim. He grabbed the ball, dribbling it hard. “Damn. I keep missing those. “Maybe you should take a break,” Seth suggested. “We did practice for two hours after school.” “It’s the post-season,” Marshall said, like that explained everything. “And speaking of prom – ” Headlights turned down the drive. Both boys looked up. It was Dr. Townsend’s Lexus. Marshall balanced the ball on his hip, shoulders squared for battle, but Seth pushed off the garage. “I’ll go,” he said. “You don’t have to leave,” Marshall protested, but Seth just smiled at him and kept walking. Because they both knew he did. *** Sitting on the corner of the big white house’s porch, Whitney Townsend watched Seth slink in the Stewards’ back door. Her father and brother were now standing beside the Lexus, arguing. She could gauge this by the straightness of Marshall’s spine, though she couldn’t hear what they were saying. Wesley Townsend would never shout on the front lawn. What would the neighbors think? 181 Whitney remembered nights of sitting on the couch with Marshall, waiting to hear their father’s car turn in the drive. Nights when report cards had been sent home, and a B had been mixed in with Marshall’s As. The night in ninth grade when he had been passed over for the Student Council. The night in seventh grade when he had been bumped from a starting position on the basketball team after an abysmal try-out. As soon as the headlights frosted the windows, Marshall would make her go upstairs, and Whitney would pull a pillow over her head to muffle her father’s shouting, her mother’s crying. Later, Whitney would slip down to Marshall’s room and crawl into his bed, wriggling into his arms like she was the one in need of comfort. Since the day after the Black Swan’s rescue, the worst fight Whitney had ever seen her father and her brother have – the only time Marshall had ever shouted back, and the only time their father had ever raised a hand to him – Marshall’s bedroom door was always locked at night. The Stewards’ front door opened now. In the slant of light from the entryway, the tall figure of Will McLain was outlined. Whitney hopped up, back pressed against the siding, the book she had been thumbing through clutched to her chest. She was shivering in her sweater and tights, wishing she had brought her coat. McLain crossed the street, whistling as he mounted the porch steps. Whitney stepped out of the shadows. “Captain?” He swung around, hand dropping to his hip like he had a gun holstered there. He probably did. Seeing Whitney, he froze. “Whitney? Is something wrong?” “I’m – not sure.” Whitney held out the book. “I found something I thought you should see.” McLain glanced across the street at her house. Her father had gone inside; Marshall was still shooting hoops. “All right,” he said. “Come in.” The house was dark. When McLain flipped the light switch, Whitney found herself in an airy foyer with hardwood floors and white-washed walls. Cardboard boxes were stacked on the staircase; other than an old-fashioned gilt-framed mirror, the walls were bare. McLain dropped his keys and his patrol cap on the claw-foot table beneath the mirror and motioned for Whitney to 182 follow him down the hall. She did, taking note of the baby grand piano in the living room, the sheets and pillows on the couch, suggesting the captain slept there rather than upstairs. The kitchen had a tile floor and chrome countertops. The blinds were pulled above the sink, and Whitney realized why the house seemed so dark. Every window was shuttered. McLain gestured at a chair. “Have a seat. Want a soda?” “Sure.” Whitney sat down, dropping her canvas tote on the chair beside her. McLain took two Cokes out of the fridge and sat down across from her. The front of the refrigerator was covered in photos of his family. His sister, Caroline, featured in most of them, sitting at the bench of the baby grand piano in a tasteful living room, pushing off a swing in a backyard, the red rocks of the New Mexico desert outlined behind her. Again Whitney felt that tickle in her brain – “So, what can I help you with, Whitney?” McLain’s tone was polite, but expectant. Whitney pushed the book over to him. “Emery gave this to me. For Valentine’s Day.” McLain read the spine. “Shakespeare. Good choice.” “He thought I would like it because of the notes whoever owned it before made in the margins. When I was reading it today, I found this.” Opening the page she had marked with a Student Vegan Society brochure, Whitney placed her fingertip over a handwritten line in the margins of Sonnet 18: I will play the swan, and die in music. At the end of the penciled-in verse was a series of numbers and a strange symbol, like a glyph. “I looked the line up,” Whitney said. “It’s from Othello, but the numbers at the end don’t match the line numbers in the play. And that symbol is Lemurian, isn’t it? It looks like the glyphs in the grimoires Marshall brings home.” Will McLain drew the book toward him, brow furrowed. He had learned to always be controlled – in his line of work, a spy for the Resistance inside Chimera, a tell would have spelled the end of him. Even so, cagey excitement was running through him. His fingers trembled as he picked the book up. The handwriting was neat and tidy, distinctly masculine. Whitney was gnawing on the chipped pink polish on her fingernails. “Where did Emery get this?” McLain asked. 183 “He said it belonged to his father. Aidan McDonagh.” “Did you tell him what you found?” Whitney shook her head. “I wasn’t sure what I had found.” “This,” McLain laid his thumb down by the glyph, “is the Lemurian word for doorway.” Whitney’s eyes widened. She had very blue eyes, like her brother’s. McLain suspected the Townsend siblings were also equally observant. “Like, a doorway to Lemuria?” she said. “Possibly.” “Do you know what the numbers mean?” Whitney was whispering. “Well, that depends,” McLain said. “Do you know anything about astronomy?” “Is that the one you use for reading horoscopes, or the one you can get a degree in?” McLain grinned. “Get your coat. We’re taking a field trip.” *** Whitney had heard the term “war room” before, but she had never truly grasped what one would look like until the guards inside Fort King stepped aside for Captain McLain and the glass double doors slid open, admitting her to a room paneled in monitors all clicking through various satellite images. Uniformed officers hunched over sophisticated computer stations. “It’s like NORAD,” she said. “You’re not that far off, actually.” Dre Alfaro popped up from behind one of the stations like a chick from an egg. Unless Whitney was mistaken, that was the same T-shirt and jeans he had worn yesterday. Dre all but lived at Fort King. Both he and Emery always seemed to be on assignment these days. Whitney didn’t begrudge them their missions. She just wished she wasn’t quite so useless. Dre sat down at one of the stations, toggling switches like he was operating a video game console. He stuck a headset over his unruly hair, just as one of the screens flickered from a satellite view of the desert to a live feed, grainy but in color, of a young woman in fatigues like McLain’s. Into the mouthpiece, Dre said, “Evening, Jensen.” 184 Jensen’s mouth moved. McLain nudged Dre. “Put her on speaker.” “Right. Sorry…” Dre flipped a switch, and Jensen’s voice came through the speakers: “…for the repositioning?” “The book,” McLain whispered. Whitney jumped. She hadn’t realized until then that she had an actual purpose here. Quickly, she handed the book to Dre. He opened it to the marked page and rattled off the long sequence of numbers. On her end, Jensen, who appeared to be ensconced at a station identical to Dre’s, tapped on her keyboard. “Okay,” she said. “It’ll just take a minute for the telescope to find that location.” She looked away from her computer. “I heard about Ben. I’m sorry, Will.” McLain nodded brusquely. “Ah. Here we are.” Jensen flipped a switch; the central screens winked out, blinking back as an image of the starry night sky. Digitized blue lines picked out a constellation, and Whitney understood what the numbers had been: celestial coordinates, designating the position of stars based on ascension and declination. As one, Whitney, Dre, and McLain leaned forward, like they could bring the image on the screen closer though it was hundreds, perhaps thousands, of light years away. “Captain,” Dre said, “do you recognize that constellation?” McLain shook his head. “That’s because it’s never been charted,” Jensen said. She sounded almost smug. “We just put your coordinates through every one of our databases. Right now, you are looking at one of the furthest galaxies a telescope on Earth has ever seen.” As though to prove that, the image fritzed. Doorway. The Totems had come from the stars, and now, someone had written out the coordinates to a far-off, undiscovered galaxy appended by the Lemurian glyph for doorway. Whitney’s hand fluttered to her throat, her gaze lighting on the silver swan charm Captain McLain always wore, her mind jumping back to the lovely dark-haired girl in the photographs on his refrigerator. I will play the swan, and die in music. Dre’s eyes were on the frozen image of the unnamed constellation. “Is it just me, or does that look a little like a – ” 185 “Swan,” McLain and Whitney said, at the same time. Whitney blushed. McLain picked up the book of sonnets. “I know this handwriting,” he said. “It’s Elijah Bishop’s. But Bishop was executed before any telescope had been built that could have seen stars that far away.” Dre frowned. “Uh, sir, that’s impossible. You can’t draw a star chart for stars you can’t see.” “No,” McLain agreed. “You can’t.” Without explaining further, he placed the book back in Whitney’s hands. His expression was solemn. “Thank you, Whitney, for showing me this. I don’t mind if you tell Emery, but would you keep it to yourself otherwise?” Whitney, somewhat taken aback, said, “Does that mean I can keep the book?” McLain smiled. “Please do. With you, I’ll know it’s in good hands.” 186 Chapter Fifteen: Star Crossed The hair care aisle of Fairfax’s largest drugstore had a decent selection of punk colors, although, disappointingly, Electric Lizard was not among them. Seth called Cleo for advice. “What are the choices?” she asked. Kisschassy was thumping on her stereo. Emery had introduced her to Australian rock. Seth tucked the phone against his shoulder and surveyed the labels. Lydia had loaned him the Escalade to drive into town; J.J. was off doing whatever J.J. did, Leigh and Whitney were doing their Vegan Society thing, Marshall had gotten roped into some father-son dinner with his dad after practice, Emery was playing roadie for their friend Chaz’s band – in sum, Seth was the odd man out all around tonight. He picked up one of the bottles. “Do I strike you as a Deadly Nightshade?” “I recommend against colors named after poisons,” Cleo said. “Sage advice, Obi-Wan.” Seth moved on down the line. “How about Pretty Flamingo?” “Won’t it clash with your tutu?” Laughing, Seth put the bottle back. Eventually, they settled on Arctic Blue. Cleo urged him to come over. “I’m bored,” she said. “Now that the Resistance isn’t fighting – ” “ – except with each other,” Seth said. “Well, right, but that’s not very exciting. And I never see you anymore.” This was true, Seth had to admit, and not entirely accidental. He had been sort of avoiding Cleo since that not-quite-platonic kiss she had planted on him at Fort King the night after Blondie collared him. But there didn’t seem to be any weirdness between them now, and anyway, Seth missed hanging out with her. Cleo was one of the first friends he had ever made. He promised to pick her up in twenty. They would go to his house and she could punkify him. Twenty minutes later, crossing the wooden bridge onto Regent’s drive, Seth felt the familiar twang of betrayal. Cleo was waiting on the porch, wearing skintight jeans and a white sweater 187 that made her eyes look silvery-blue. She hopped into the Escalade as soon as Seth slowed down and pitched a bag of Oreos into his lap. Cleo rocked. They munched cookies and griped about the Resistance on their way to Castle Estates, where they found a note from Lydia saying she had gone out to dinner with Ingrid McLain. Operation Swan Song had put Lydia in charge of the relocation program for the werekin filtering in to Fort King from the Underground; she was helping to fix them up with new identities, jobs that paid enough to live on, decent housing – and school, for their children. Hence the dinner with their principal, Ms. McLain. The influx had been slow but steady; werekin didn’t readily present themselves for registering with humans after decades of hiding from Chimera, but word was getting out that times had changed. It felt like progress on some front, anyway. Upstairs, Cleo spread towels on the bathroom floor, while Seth changed into old sweats. No shirt, as the dye would ruin it. Cleo folded her legs up under her on the sink as he gummed dye into his blonde locks. “Aphrodisia doesn’t know what to make of your recovery,” she said, eyeing the smooth, flat skin on his stomach, where his scar had been. “Cleo, I am not just recovered. I am supercharged,” Seth said. “You should see me on the ball court. I almost shattered the backboard today at practice when I dunked.” “I will see you,” Cleo said. “At your game. It’s Thursday, right?” Seth looked over at her, surprised. “You’re coming to my game?” “Wouldn’t miss it,” Cleo said. Seth was touched. Basketball wasn’t high on Cleo’s list of priorities. “Anxious to see Connor Burke again?” he teased. Cleo made a face at him. The timer dinged. Cleo positioned him on the floor, Seth’s shoulders hanging over the edge of the tub, head tipped back for her to rinse his hair with the extendable shower nozzle. Warm water trickled down Seth’s back, soaking the waistband of his pants. He shut his eyes against wayward streams of ammoniatainted water as Cleo massaged the dye into his scalp, as it said to on the package. 188 “This is very relaxing,” Seth told her. “Cats enjoy being groomed, you know.” “I can tell.” A smile was obvious in Cleo’s voice. “You’re purring.” “I am not,” Seth said, though he might have been, a little. “So did you hear anything about some major discovery Whitney made in astrophysics?” “I think Elijah Bishop was the one who made the discovery,” Cleo said, “and I didn’t think anyone besides Emery was supposed to know about that.” “And yet, you know about it.” “Yes, well, I have clearance. You just know a wererabbit with a big mouth.” The water shut off. “Okay. Keep your eyes closed until I dry you off.” A towel was fluffed over Seth’s head, then across his chest and back, soaking up stray water droplets. He tried not to notice how Cleo’s hands lingered on his arms as she helped him sit up, or how close her nose was to his as she finger-fixed his sopping locks. Somewhere in the last sixty seconds, the vibe in the room had changed. “Give it to me straight, Cleo,” Seth said, trying for levity. “Am I punkalicious?” “Sweetheart, you are gorgeous,” Cleo said. Then her arms were around his neck, and she was kissing him. She tasted like salt and bubblegum. They had kissed once before, Cleo and Seth – an encounter neither of them ever referenced. Afterwards Cleo had said kissing him was gross, because he was an animal. It was a fight they had never formally resolved. In that kiss, Cleo had been fierce, bruising Seth’s lips with hers, sliding her hands all over his body. This kiss was so tender Seth would have questioned whether it was a real kiss had it not been for Cleo molding herself to him, pressing him back against the tub. Seth sat statue-still, lips parted. When Cleo finally drew back, her eyes were searching his, her cheeks lightly flushed. She looked – vulnerable. Cleo, who could take down a werejaguar with her bare hands. Seth felt a sting in the center of his chest. “Hi,” he said, gently. “You must be looking for my brother, J.J. I’m Seth. The gay twin.” 189 Cleo’s eyes dropped back to his lips. “Care to test that theory?” She moved to kiss him again. This time Seth pushed her away and gained his feet, turning his back on her with his arms hugged around the hole that had suddenly opened up in his middle. Theory? Cleo thought him being gay was a theory? Cleo was his best friend. How could she not recognize such an essential part of his makeup? It’s like your skin, Marshall had said. You can’t hide it, and you can’t change it. In the mirror, Seth watched her scoop up damp towels and pitch them into the hamper. He couldn’t even appreciate how awesome his new hair color looked. He felt sick inside. “Cleo, it’s not a theory,” he said. “I’m in love with Marshall. That’s not a theory.” “Okay, okay. Don’t get all dramatic on me, sweetheart. I was just messing around.” The words were light enough, but brittle as snapping twigs. Seth turned around. “Cleo – ” “Look, Seth, let’s just – ” Cleo blew out a breath between her lips. Then, suddenly, she dropped the towels in a heap and hurried into Seth’s bedroom. Escaping. Seth sprinted ahead of her and blocked the doorway with his arms outstretched, one hand gripping either side of the frame. Cleo glared at him. Her ice-chip eyes were frozen solid. Now she was mad. Mad on Cleo could be deadly. “Sweetheart, I can move you,” she warned. “I wouldn’t be so sure,” Seth said. “But either way, we are talking about this.” “Fine.” Cleo bit out the word. “I’m sorry I kissed you. Have we talked it out?” “No.” Seth shifted his weight when she attempted to duck by him. “I want to know why you kissed me.” “Oh please,” Cleo said. “Like you don’t know you’re cute?” “You think of me that way? As…cute?” “Here’s a tip, sweetheart. Just because you like boys doesn’t mean girls don’t notice you.” Seth ran a hand through his wet hair. He knew that. Obviously he knew that. He had seen girls look at him as he walked down the halls at school. Had even had a few come up to him, give him their 190 numbers, invite him to parties. But this was Cleo. “I don’t understand,” he said, softly. Cleo looked away. After a moment, seeming to decide it wasn’t worth the trouble to move him, she flounced over to Seth’s bed and flopped down. Seth joined her, leaving a wedge of space between them. Seth despised that wedge of space. Despised the sudden need for it. “You wanting to kiss me, that’s about J.J., isn’t it?” he said. Cleo buried her face in her hands. As of now, Seth decided, he was officially hating this conversation. “I can tell the two of you apart, you know,” she said, through her fingers. “I’m the scrawny one with the blue hair and tattoos,” Seth said. Cleo laughed. Thinly, but it broke the tension. Lowering her hands from her face, she scooted back to sit against the headboard. Seth scooted up beside her. Cleo took a breath. “How I feel about J.J. is – complicated,” she said. “With you, it’s easier. You let me care for you. Comfort you. You let me in. J.J. doesn’t let anyone in.” Seth could not deny that. For a psychic, his twin was a very closed-off person. “Cleo, he cares about you. He wanted me to save you, as a favor to him.” “I know. I know he cares.” Cleo confessed this on a puff of air. Seth violated their notouching zone by bumping her shoulder with his. “Then what’s the problem? Go forth, woman. Declare thyself.” She tried to smile, but it fragmented, dissolving like pixels on a screen. Had she been any girl but Cleo, Seth would have said she was trying not to cry. “Did J.J. ever tell you how he got his scars?” Tactfully, Seth said, “He said it happened when he was a child.” “He would think of it that way. The last day we were children.” Cleo curled her hands against her sides, like the lacelike patterns were even then being burned into her flesh. “Werekin and hunters finish their training in the Scholae Bestiarii between the ages of thirteen and fourteen – breeding age, for werekin. After that, they have to be separated, except on missions. On the day you graduate, if you want to call it that, partners have to fight in the Arena, against one another, to the death. It’s kill or be killed, 191 against the partner you’ve been paired with your entire childhood. For hunters, it’s proof we don’t see werekin as human. For werekin, it’s proof your essential peacefulness has been eradicated by years of brutality. LeRoi was willing to sacrifice one of every partnered pair, because neither hunters nor werekin were of any use to her if we weren’t absolutely willing to follow her orders.” Whatever the square root of evil was, Seth thought, Ursula LeRoi was it. “Maybe you should start at the beginning,” he said. “Whenever that was,” Cleo said; but she closed her eyes, and began. ** “From the time he was collared, J.J. lived in Ursula LeRoi’s household – unheard of, for a werekin, but LeRoi was always fascinated by J.J. She sent him to the Scholae Bestiarii for training when he was four years old. Up until then, J.J. had been a prince. I, like all hunter children, was born a slave – taken from my mother as soon as I was born, kept in a cage under observation until LeRoi’s scientists were certain I wouldn’t skin. But once J.J. and I were paired, the tables turned. He became the slave, I became the master. He was collared. I held the key. “That first night, when the trainers showed us into our cell, we had one cot, one blanket.” Cleo toyed with the edge of Seth’s plain brown bedspread. Her eyes were half-closed, but Seth couldn’t stop staring at her. Her story seemed to have frozen him in place. “They ordered me to sleep on the bed. I offered to share, but J.J. refused and slept on the floor. In the morning, the trainers marched us down to the Arena. One of the new hunters had given his blanket to his partner in the night, so they tied him to the whipping post and beat him bloody. Left him there, all day, in the sun. He was four years old. “J.J. knew that would happen, you see. He had been raised by LeRoi. He had already started training with Xanthe. He knew the rules, and he was protecting me. I wanted to protect him, too, but he wouldn’t allow it. The trainers ordered us to break our partners. To torture them. When I refused, J.J. called me weak and did it himself – cut himself, starved himself, burned himself. The trainers never questioned that I was following orders. Why would they?” 192 Cleo sounded bitter now. “I followed every other order they ever gave me, and J.J. was so – feral. You can’t imagine – the things they made us do, the live victims…” She swallowed hard. Seth shifted. Cleo turned her head to look at him. “Seth, when I told you not to trust J.J., I meant it. I saw him kill again and again in the Arena. I saw him plunge that knife into your father without a shred of remorse. I never knew Xanthe was working with the Resistance. I never knew he was training J.J., from birth, to be LeRoi’s worst enemy – a werekin with such absolute control of his own thoughts and emotions he could deceive anyone; a telepath so powerful he could reach across space and time and connect to the mind of any werekin, anywhere. I never knew Captain McLain was protecting the Black Swan. J.J. never told me. As far as I knew, he was still a prince. Still absolutely loyal to LeRoi. “That last night, the night before we graduated, the trainers separated us. I couldn’t sleep. I hadn’t slept in a room without J.J. in ten years. Our cells were next to one another, so he talked to me through the wall. We recited lines from old movies Xanthe had shown us. J.J.’s favorite was Casablanca. We could quote the whole thing. “The next day, when it was our turn in the Arena, I fought hard, but it was just a show. I knew I couldn’t beat him. No one had ever beaten J.J. in the Arena. “The Partners were all there, and General Burke, and Captain McLain, and of course Dr. LeRoi. Even Xanthe was there. When it was over, J.J. was kneeling over me with a knife, and I…Seth, I called him an animal.” Cleo was all but whispering. Seth could picture it, just as she described – could hear the roar of the crowd, smell the blood-soaked sand of the Arena, taste terror like copper pennies on his tongue. “I hated him right then. Because if it had been reversed, if I had won, I couldn’t have killed him. I was in love with him. I’d been in love with him since we were four years old.” “What happened?” Seth asked, in a whisper. “McLain intervened.” Cleo leaned back against the headboard and looked at her feet, stretched out in front of her. “He told LeRoi I was one of the most gifted hunters he had ever trained, and asked her to spare me. LeRoi said she would indulge this ‘whim,’ as she 193 put it, if I could prove my worth as a hunter. So the trainers carried out a bowl of silver powder, and they ordered me to hold J.J.’s hands in it, and – I did. I held him there, while he screamed, while the silver powder ate his skin all the way down to the bone. I had never heard J.J. scream before. I had never seen him cry. I told myself I didn’t care. I could be just as savage as he was. It was the first and only time I ever hurt him. “After that, J.J. went back to LeRoi’s household, and McLain assigned me a hunter partner, Stefan. J.J. was a prince again. He treated me like he always had, like we were warriors in the same cause, and I tried to do the same. What was the point of loving him? Even if he could have loved me back, and he never acted like he did, it would never have been allowed. Hunters and werekin are never allowed to mate. LeRoi would have punished us, horribly. Probably killed us. So I did my best to think of him as an animal. A beautiful, deadly animal. “Then I met you, and you were so like him, and so not like him. You could have killed me in the graveyard that night, but you chose not to. And I could see you hated leaving me at Regent’s. When you came back for me, you said J.J. had told you to save me, and I was convinced he wanted me to collar you, for LeRoi. That was what I was coming here to do, the night I saved you from those hunters. But I couldn’t. You trusted me. You lay down to sleep right next to me. When I kissed you that night, I was thinking of J.J., I admit it. But I was thinking of him and wishing he was you, not the other way around. I was wishing he was someone good.” Cleo folded in on herself, gripping her elbows, rocking back and forth. This was too much for Seth; he circled his arms around her shoulders, resting his cheek against her back. He still felt sick inside, frozen all the way to his core, though now for very different reasons. Paris, he remembered Cleo and J.J. saying, as they had prepared for the battle at Fort King. We’ll always have Paris. Their inside joke. Their mantra for a lost cause. Except it wasn’t. It couldn’t be. Cleo and J.J. belonged together. Seth knew it, all the way down in his bones. Sometimes people were just so right for each other it didn’t matter if all the stars in the universe lined up against them, they would find a way to one another. Like Seth had found Marshall. 194 “J.J. is good, Cleo,” he said, softly. “He and McLain must have arranged your last fight. J.J. would never kill you. He had to know McLain was going to step in – ” “Don’t you think I know that now?” Cleo sounded broken. “He saved me on our last day as partners just like he did on our first. Seth, don’t you see? J.J. is always a step ahead of everyone. He knew LeRoi would order me to torture him, and he knew I would do it, to save myself. Now every time I look at his scars, I have to remember that he saved me, knowing I would hurt him in the end.” The tears she had been holding back finally escaped. She tried to turn away, but Seth pulled her down onto the pillows and held her, stroking her hair, aching inside for her, and for his twin. Had my hands held in a bowl of silver powder, J.J. had said, to teach me a lesson. A lesson in the cost of loving someone – a pound of flesh, dearly bought. 195 Chapter Sixteen: War Dance Fairfax High tradition held that every male student rent his prom tux from Monique’s Bridal & Formalwear Boutique, housed in a Victorian-style mansion on Riverside Drive in Fairfax’s historic downtown district. Marshall parked the Audi on a cobblestone street behind Lydia’s Escalade, and he, Seth, and J.J. trailed the womenfolk up the leaf-strewn sidewalk to the oak front door. Marshall had something of a skip back in his step this morning. As of last night, his grounding had been officially revoked. The father-son dinner must have gone well, Seth thought. Monique – a spray-tanned, super-skinny, bottle-blonde goddess of Armani, neither French nor female – glided out from behind a counter overhung by lace garters and jeweled veils to greet them. He took one look at Seth’s jaguar tattoos and Arctic Blue hair, and declared him dahvine, dahling. Monique positioned his customers in front of a bank of fulllength oval mirrors by the dressing rooms. Leigh and Whitney flitted around, rifling through racks of prom dresses, gushing over weddings gowns – the one and only time Seth had ever seen Whitney behave like an actual girl. Lydia and Meredith sipped tea on a damask-upholstered divan, looking on dewily as Monique measured inseams, a stub of pencil stuck behind his ear. Dates had not been mentioned, but you could tell Monique got it. Seth heard him humming Barbara Streisand under his breath as he vanished into the back. Monique’s was the first stop on the Magical Prom Express, and, thankfully, the only one the male members of their party would be making. J.J. had tagged along only because from here the boys were headed to Cleo’s for training. Adopting a catlike air of superiority, he plopped down in a chintz armchair by the windows to sun himself. Monique soon emerged from the stockroom with vests, ties, and jackets, and Marshall and Seth changed in a fitting room that looked like a racy boudoir. Crushed velvet chairs. Black carpet. Crystal chandeliers. Could have had possibilities if their mothers hadn’t been present. “I’m not sure I tied this right,” Seth 196 complained as he stepped out of his fitting room, tugging on his bowtie. “Looks right,” Marshall said, glancing up at him in the fulllength mirror. Seth didn’t answer. He had stepped up beside Marshall, and was staring at their reflections. Monique had outfitted them both in basic black – a long coat for Marshall, accentuating the leanness of his frame, complemented by a silver-checkered vest and tie that picked out the gray in his baby blues; for Seth, a gold cummerbund and matching bowtie, and a fitted jack that somehow made him look taller. They looked good together, Seth thought. They looked right. “You clean up nice, Philadelphia,” Marshall said, with careful politeness. “You too, Indiana,” Seth said, with equal care. “What about you, dahling?” Marshall turned to J.J., eyeing him like an especially juicy steak. “Any preferences on color?” J.J., flangdang across his chair, addressed his sardonic smirk to the frescoed ceiling. “I’m not going,” he said. Meredith squealed. She was either completely clueless about her son’s romance or completely clued-in, Seth couldn’t decide which – Dr. Townsend kept her pretty well-medicated. She had smiled at Seth drippily all morning, like always. “But sweetie,” she said to J.J. now, “it’s prom!” Lydia settled her tea cup on its saucer with a definitive click. “Monique, I think something in ivory, don’t you?” “With hair like that? Absolument!” Clapping his hands, Monique rushed off to the stockroom. J.J. had sat up straight, staring at Lydia, golden eyes bright with betrayal. “You said I didn’t have to go!” “Yes, well, I changed my mind.” Lydia was remorseless. “You are, as of now, required to go to prom.” J.J. glared at her. Seth’s twin submitted to his fitting with ill grace, but he still ended up with an ivory tux, paired with a black tie and vest. The tux was fitted, like Seth’s, with a mandarin collar – very debonair, though on J.J., it was more James Bond than Cary Grant. The late February day was ripe with the promise of springtime: cloudless blue sky like a stretch of tropical sea, breeze smelling of 197 last night’s rain and this morning’s sunshine. Birds chirped at them from the weeping willow in Monique’s front yard as the boys climbed back into the Audi. J.J. braced his boots against the back of Seth’s seat. He still looked irritated. “If I get expelled, they won’t let me go to prom, right? Because I could blow up the Chem lab. All the materials are right there.” “But sweetie,” Seth said, “it’s prom!” J.J. muttered about high school. Marshall grated a glance at him in the rearview mirror. Since they were already in town, Seth suggested dropping in at Re-Spin. Emery was their mainline to the Resistance now that J.J. was on the outs with the Commanders, and Seth was anxious to hear if there had been any developments on the alliance with McLain. The sweet aroma of cinnamon and yeast drew them to the food court for coffees and Cinnabons. The mall was crowded with weekend shoppers. As prom season was in full swing, most of the shoppers were teenage girls. The storefront mannequins were all showing off yards and yards of sequined satin. Seth tried, unsuccessfully, to picture Cleo in a faerie princess confection with a puffy skirt and bell sleeves. “Hey player.” Seth looked around, startled. Who should be sashaying toward them in her Lady Knights hoodie and fleece athletic pants but Vixen O’Shea. J.J.’s lashes lowered as he watched her approach, hands in the pockets of his worn-out leather jacket. Seth glowered at him. “You invited her?” he said. “Why?” J.J. looked puzzled. “She’s going to train with us,” he said. Quinn and Marshall fell into an animated discussion about Connor Burke’s defensive zone strategy on their way to Re-Spin. The front window was papered over with flyers for the upcoming concert by Listening Korn, the indie rock band headed up by the store’s only full-time employee, Charles Bonaparte, a.k.a. Chaz. J.J. studied the signage with a wrinkled brow. “Listening Korn? What does that even mean?” 198 “It means Chaz smokes too much weed,” Marshall said. J.J. glanced at him. Marshall had been even terser than usual with him this morning. They found Emery sorting through invoices in the combo stockroom, office, and employee lounge. They circled up folding chairs and passed around the box of Cinnabons, eating with their fingers. Quinn had slipped her UA beanie off; J.J. was watching her wind her hair up into a knot on top of her head. Seth was tempted to throw coffee on her. “The Commanders are as divided as ever,” Emery reported, bleakly. “Ozzie and Josephine are on Mom’s side, more or less. They trust Agathon. Clyde and Logue are with Derek, refusing to work with McLain until the Black Swan is produced. Ben would have been the tie-breaker, but LeRoi took care of that.” “Ben wouldn’t have broken the tie,” Quinn said. “He would have talked them all around to a unanimous decision.” Seth could see the logic of that. Declaring open war against Chimera was a huge departure from the Resistance’s former guerilla tactics; without the steadfast support of all of the Commanders, the fighters might decide it was too great a risk. The Resistance was not the Marines. No court martials, no weekend furloughs, no paychecks. Fighters could refuse a mission anytime they pleased. Marshall licked icing off his knuckle. He had draped his jacket over the back of his chair; his Nike T-shirt was so faded Seth could only make out the N. “Do the Commanders always squabble this much?” “Yes,” J.J. said. He had no patience for decisions by committee. Attack first, discuss later, that was J.J.’s outlook on life. “Tell them what McLain found, Emery.” Emery leaned forward. “You remember that book of poems I gave Whitney for Valentine’s Day?” he said. When everyone looked blank, he sighed. “Well, anyway, I gave her this book of sonnets that used to belong to my dad. He was Resistance, sent to Fairfax on reports that the Ark was being housed at Fort King. After the hunters caught up to him, Mom kept the things he had left behind, just for sentimental purposes, but it turns out there were coordinates encoded in that book. Celestial coordinates, pointing to an undiscovered constellation, and a Lemurian glyph that translates into doorway.” 199 Seth had had the sense before that he was looking at a puzzle laid out by Chimera but not seeing how the pieces fit together. What had Regent said? He was missing the forest for the trees? He put his coffee cup down beside his chair. “J.J., what do you think LeRoi is up to?” J.J. crossed his arms. Seth saw Quinn glance at him, and suddenly wished J.J.’s black camouflage didn’t fit him quite so well. “What she’s always been up to,” J.J. said, oblivious to anything but the mission. “Raising Lemuria. But for that, she needs the Ark.” He turned to Emery. “If I tell them this, you won’t tell your mother?” Emery was so affronted his nose twitched. “Of course I won’t.” J.J. looked at Quinn, the same question in his eyes. Quinn shook her head. J.J. said, “The mission Ben went on was to the Amazon Rainforest. The intel we got off LeRoi’s PDA indicated she had found the Tortoise Clan, the only werekin clan that dates back to Lemuria. Our satellite images showed a power source deep in the rainforest, much too strong to be anything manmade. I think it’s the Source – the key to unlocking the power of the Totems once Lemuria is raised. So did Ben. I volunteered to check it out, but he insisted on going himself, to intercept LeRoi before she could recover whatever it is. But the thing is,” J.J. looked up, at Seth, “I think LeRoi wanted us to find those coordinates, because she wanted Ben out of the way. She knew he wanted me here, to watch you, and he wouldn’t trust anyone but himself to capture her. Ben founded the Resistance. It was a good bet the Commanders would fall apart without him. LeRoi may be evil, but more than anything, she’s clever, and she’s patient. Why attack us when she can let us destroy ourselves? “What Whitney found in that book was written by Elijah Bishop. McLain had the handwriting analyzed, and it matched. I think Elijah Bishop found the Tortoise Clan, years ago, with his father, on Abraham Bishop’s last expedition to the Amazon. I think they told him how to find the Ark, and I think they showed him where the Totems came from. They gave him the means to raise Lemuria and the map of how to send the werekin home, but they kept the Source as a final safeguard against humans trying to take the power of the Totems for themselves.” 200 J.J. sat back. “We can’t be sure how much of that Bishop told LeRoi before he stopped trusting her, but she knows she can’t raise Lemuria without the Ark, and she can’t access the power of the Totems without the Source. I think she used Ben to get the Source for her, and now, she’s going to take the Ark back.” “But the Ark is protected,” Seth said. “There are Marines, and the Gen-0s – ” “Seth, LeRoi designed Fort King. There isn’t a square inch of it she doesn’t know. Sooner or later she will come for the Ark. The only way to stop her may be to complete it and raise Lemuria ourselves, before she kills all of us.” J.J. fell back. He looked weary, much older than seventeen. “Not that anyone cares what I think.” He picked at his roll. Quinn rested a hand, lightly, on his wrist. J.J. smiled at her, with just the corner of his mouth. “Well, in the category of good news,” Emery said, “the Commanders did sign an oath not to collar werekin in the future.” “Wow,” Seth said. “That was big of them.” Emery shrugged. “It’s a step in the right direction, Mom says. At least this way Derek can’t get away with doing to any other werekin what he did to you, and what he wanted to do to J.J.” Marshall leaned back in his chair, thumbs hooked through his belt loops. He had not stopped staring at J.J. this whole time. “What would happen,” he asked, “if the Commanders found out Agathon is planning to secretly raise Lemuria, and he hasn’t brought the Resistance in on the plan?” “Ever hear of all hell breaking loose?” J.J. said. Emery nodded vigorously. “You got it. Derek would see it as proof the Gen-0 have been playing the Resistance, using them to raise Lemuria for their human masters. Right now, with Ben gone and the Black Swan missing, I think just about everyone would agree with him.” “And what about General Burke?” Marshall pressed. “What would he do, what would the government do, if the werekin tried to raise their homeland on their own?” “Probably exterminate us,” Emery said, “and take Lemuria for themselves.” “So what you’re really talking about is a war, werekin against humans, and what you need to make that war a reality is for the 201 Black Swan to talk to the Commanders, give the idea her approval, right? You want her back so she can tell the Commanders this is what the werekin should do?” Marshall was getting at something. J.J. seemed to know what it was. Placing his feet flat on the floor, he braced his elbows on his knees, eyes narrowed to golden slivers. “Your point?” “That was your original plan, wasn’t it? You sent Agathon and McLain to meet Seth at Fort King the night you knew we were breaking in. You wanted the Resistance to free the Black Swan. Then you would have had everything you needed, all in one place, to take control of the Ark from LeRoi, add Seth’s blood to it, and raise Lemuria before Burke had a chance to stop you.” “Not bad, Doc.” J.J.’s smirk had a nasty edge. “Did you work that out all by yourself?” “I catch on quick.” Marshall’s smile matched J.J.’s for razorthinness. “Only it didn’t work out like you intended, did it? Because Caroline didn’t trust you. She went into hiding.” Seth had started at Marshall’s casual use of the Black Swan’s first name – a jolting reminder that Marshall Townsend had spent eight hours on the road, alone, with the werekin’s mythical savior. Eight hours during which Caroline McLain had confided in him that her parents were not werekin. “The Black Swan isn’t here now to issue orders, so your little scheme is stuck in limbo. Must be frustrating for you.” “Indiana,” Seth said, sharply. “Chill out, okay?” J.J.’s lips were curled up in a way that showed his canines. Emery was bouncing on his chair like he was about to skin. “I am chilled out, Philadelphia.” Marshall sounded ready to throw another punch, actually. “I’m just asking J.J. for a little clarification.” Seth was lost. “Clarification on what?” “We had to guard information,” J.J. growled, ignoring Seth while glaring daggers at Marshall. There was just a hint of pale spots across his cheeks. “Information on what?” Seth demanded, desperately, as Quinn said, firmly, “How about everybody take a breath and tell us what you’re talking about.” J.J. folded his arms again. It looked to Seth like he was hiding the tips of his claws. “Doc here thinks I should have told the 202 Commanders what Agathon was planning to do with the Ark before the battle. In other words, he doesn’t trust me.” “Yes he does,” Seth said, automatically. “No,” Marshall said. “I don’t.” His voice was ice-cold. A wire seemed to be strung between his eyes and J.J.’s, tying their gazes together. “I see what you do. You and Xanthe. You’re chess masters. You can see a few moves ahead, and you don’t mind sacrificing a few pawns to win the game.” J.J. winced. Seth knew he was thinking of their father, and his heart turned over in his chest. He laid a restraining hand on Marshall’s arm. “Indiana, seriously, leave it.” Marshall shook him off. His temper ran right under the surface these days; at the moment, it was seething to the boiling point. “Seth, you may not want to hear this, but someone needs to say it. J.J. positioned the Resistance to boot Chimera out of power, and he did it without telling the Commanders his endgame – without letting them decide if raising Lemuria, even if that means going to war against humankind, is a course of action they even want to take, all because he and Xanthe are convinced they know best.” “And what makes you think we don’t?” J.J.’s words were undercut by a sharpness that sounded surprisingly human, despite the hiss in his voice. “Is clairvoyance one of your superhuman powers, Doc?” Emphasis on the human. Quinn looked away. Marshall’s eyes had darkened to the blue of the ocean at midnight. Only Seth’s hand on his arm was keeping him in his seat; if he got to his feet, Seth wasn’t sure he could keep this from coming to blows. “You think you can manipulate all the pieces here, J.J., but you can’t. Regent got to the Black Swan. He got to Seth just last week. LeRoi knows where the Ark is, and Regent has a spy inside the Resistance. You just said yourself she’s coming for it – ” “I can protect Seth,” J.J. said, through his teeth. Although Seth was not sure what protecting him had to do with anything, the effect of J.J.’s words on Marshall was undeniable: He sat back, the anger seeming to leak out of him. Suddenly, he looked as weary as J.J. “You’re not invincible, you know,” he said. Marshall sounded tired. “And you’re not omniscient, either.” 203 “I know that.” J.J. spoke stiffly. “Do you, J.J.? Do you really? Because if one whisper of your plot leaks out,” Marshall said, “you’re going to have an enemy on your hands even bigger and scarier than Chimera – the United States military. I don’t think I have to tell you what happens then.” He did not have to tell Seth. Operation Swan Song would be over, General Burke would execute J.J. as a traitor, and the rest of their kindred would go down in flames right along with him. *** On the drive to Cleo’s, Marshall cranked the music, discouraging conversation. J.J. slumped in the back, answering Seth’s attempts at conversation with a few grunts and growls until, finally, Seth gave up and endured the ride in silence. Quinn had taken off after they left Re-Spin. J.J. had walked her to her Jeep. Whatever had been said between them had not improved his mood. Cleo was still pajama-clad when the boys strolled in. (For Cleo, this meant cotton shorts and a T-shirt with a bull’s eye on the back.) She hugged Seth hello, all elbows and wrists, and teased him about his newly-blue hair. No weirdness this morning, to Seth’s relief. “J.J. is going to prom,” he informed her. “Is he now?” Cleo turned to J.J., ice-chip eyes sparkling. “Unless I decide to blow up the Chem lab first,” J.J. said. He slouched against the counter, tracking Cleo with his eyes as she poured herself a cup of coffee. Was he comparing her to Vixen O’Shea? Seth wondered. Both girls were both gorgeous, in different ways: Cleo more striking than pretty, with strong features and a dancer’s lean, muscular build; Quinn classically beautiful, delicate and petite, freckles like a suntan across her vulpine features. Seth still preferred Cleo. “What’s got you in a snit?” Cleo demanded, when J.J. turned his nose up at her offer to make tea. “Me,” said Marshall, equably, from the couch. A half-dozen grimoires were piled on the coffee table, along with an exhaustive supply of yellow legal pads, and a box of ballpoint pens. Aphrodisia assigned more homework than Dr. Gideon. 204 Cleo turned to Seth, who shook his head. “Long story,” he said. “Okaaay.” Cleo poured a cup of coffee for Marshall as well – black, one sugar – and joined him on the couch. J.J. slunk toward the Bat Cave’s entrance, looking decidedly pouty. “You’re not training with us?” he said. “Not when you’re in a snit,” Cleo said. “It’s too early in the day for me to have to kick your tail.” J.J. stalked down the steps. Unperturbed, Cleo plopped her feet on the coffee table and curled her hands around her mug. “Don’t hit on my boyfriend,” Seth warned. “Your fault if you can’t hold on to your man,” Cleo teased back. Seth grinned. J.J. was already in his karate gi when Seth trotted down the stairs. While he changed, he saw J.J. slip his hand in his pocket and take out a napkin – the one with Quinn O’Shea’s number written on it. Seth hadn’t realized he had kept it. “Are you going to call her?” he asked. “I don’t know.” J.J. tucked the napkin under his jeans and straightened up, stretching his cold muscles. “I’m not sure what to say to her.” Seemed like he had known what to say the other day, with that I know how to play line, Seth thought. “It’s simple. You say ‘hi,’ she says ‘hi.’ You say, ‘Feel like grabbing coffee?’ And you go from there.” “Was that how it was for you and Marshall?” “Sort of.” Seth placed his katana, inside its sheath, on the long table beneath the weapons wall. “We were friends first. Played basketball and video games. The kissing part came later.” A thought struck him then, and he sat down on the table. “J.J., have you ever kissed anyone?” “No,” J.J. said. “Who was I going to kiss, LeRoi?” “Ew!” Seth wrinkled up his nose. “I thought maybe you and Quinn had…you know.” J.J. just shrugged. “You could have kissed Cleo,” Seth said. “Seth, Cleo doesn’t want to kiss me. I don’t know where you and Leigh get that from.” Leigh was right. J.J. was clueless. “Well, do you want to kiss her?” he asked. 205 “I don’t know. Sometimes.” Almost unconsciously, J.J. flexed his fingers, standing out the scars on the backs of his hands. “Growing up together like we did, there were times I thought about it. Especially as she got – older.” “So you thought about it, as in the past tense, or you think about it, as in the present tense?” “Both.” J.J. tied his black bandana around his head. “There’s something about her, don’t you think? Quinn, I mean.” “It’s called a rack,” Seth said. J.J. snorted. “So are you going to ask her to prom? Quinn, I mean.” “I don’t know. We’ll see.” Wasn’t a yes, Seth thought. He slid off the table and began limbering up, clasping his elbows and turning side-to-side. “Listen, J.J., about what Marshall said.” In the mirrored walls, Seth saw J.J. cut his eyes to him. Quickly, he said, “I trust you. You know that. But are you sure? Are you absolutely sure this is what the Black Swan wants us to do – to raise Lemuria even if it means going to war against humankind? Because I thought Agathon’s whole point was to protect humans, because Earth is special and all that.” “That is the point. We’re just not protecting humankind from us. We’re protecting them from themselves. And yes,” J.J. said. “I’m sure this is what the Black Swan wants. Now.” He tossed Seth his katana. “Let’s see if you’ve been practicing.” Seth had been, each morning after his run and each night before bed. J.J. positioned him on the mat and observed from every angle as he walked through the cuts he had learned so far, feet planted on the floor, for balance; hands slightly open, for control; stomach in and spine straight, for strength. “Excellent,” J.J. approved. “Now I’ll show you some footwork.” Seth stepped off the mat. J.J. had taken a katana from the weapons wall; it was elegant, like all of Regent’s weapons, the silver blade etched with Lemurian glyphs. The handle was carved into a star. J.J. held it in his left hand. He closed his eyes. Stillness settled over him like a blanket. As though responding to silent music, he began to move. Slowly, at first, then with quickening speed, his feet barely touching the mat before lifting off again – graceful as the sloping lines of the glyphs on his sword, flowing through kicks, jabs, 206 strikes, and punches, his sword parting the air like water all the while. Savage, Cleo had called him. A beautiful, deadly animal. Leaning against the wall, Seth pictured the jaguar gods sunning themselves on the stone steps of their jungle pyramid. One light, one dark. Twins. Their skins had fused as they had leapt into the trees, becoming one. Different as they were, Seth wondered, how much were he and J.J. the same? J.J. stopped, abruptly, and opened his eyes. “What?” he said. Seth quickly dropped his gaze. “Nothing.” For a second, as J.J.’s forehead wrinkled, he thought J.J. would press him, but he let it go. “In the Scholae Bestiarii, we were taught to combine martial arts and weaponry. Like Cleo told you, your sword should be part of your arsenal, not the length and breadth of it.” He demonstrated the moves again, this time in slow motion, and moved aside to observe as Seth took his place on the mat. It took several tries for Seth to memorize the stances correctly. Then they did them together, side by side. The soft slap of their feet on the mat vibrated in Seth’s chest, the beat of a tribal drum. Blood was crashing in his veins, loud as a thundering waterfall. Maybe it was leftover tension from the argument at Re-Spin. Maybe it was that he hadn’t skinned in days, and magic was shuddering through him, begging for release. Maybe it was that his werekin senses had been on overdrive since he had bonded with the Totems, every sense amplified, as though he had rebooted to life from black-and-white to Technicolor. Maybe it was being a seventeen-year-old werejaguar with impulse control problems. Seth was itching for a fight. He angled his stance slightly, so he and J.J. were paralleling one another like dancers. Then circling one another, like cats in a ring. J.J. shook his head. He never sparred with Seth. “You don’t want to do this,” he said. “Seth, you do not want to fight me.” Oh, but Seth did. He really, really did. He ran at him, yelling, “Hi-YAH!” and swinging his blade in a wicked curve at J.J.’s head. He knew J.J. could dodge it, and J.J. did; Seth’s sword whistled by his ear, slicing off a golden lock. He caught sight of J.J.’s expression in the mirror. He could see that 207 had irritated him, for someone to come so near to slipping past his guard. He paced him, staying out of striking range. “Seth, think it through,” J.J. said. “I’ve been training longer – ” he deflected a sword-slash with an effortless flick of his wrist “ – I’ve fought in the Arena – ” he ducked under a jab “ – I could hurt you, Seth, come on.” Seth darted in, feigning a roundhouse kick J.J. could have easily blocked, but transforming it into a vertical cut at the last second. J.J. somersaulted backwards like he was attached to wires and landed lightly on his feet, sword raised. “You know, big brother,” Seth said, “I think I can take you.” Yup. That did it. J.J.’s eyes narrowed; launching off the mat, he kicked at Seth’s chest. Seth pivoted, cutting the sword at his twin’s ankles; but J.J. cartwheeled, executing a backhand slice, and the tip of his blade nicked Seth’s cheek. That drew a hiss from Seth, a true cat hiss that showed his teeth. He lunged, jabbing his fist twice into J.J.’s gut, rapid-fire. J.J. countered with a punch that snapped Seth’s head back, sending him staggering. Seth slumped to the mat. J.J. threw his sword down. He was very pale. “Seth, damn it, I told you – you don’t understand, you don’t know what I’m like when – ” Seth raised his chin off his chest, grinning madly, and skinned. The next second, J.J. had skinned as well. The jaguars collided in midair. J.J. and Seth were small for jaguars, only five-and-a-half-feet long, but deadly nonetheless. J.J.’s fur was coal-black, overlain with ivory rosettes, like a faded outline on dark paper; Seth’s fur was tawny, covered in inky spots. Even in their separate skins, you could see they were twins. Same wedge-shaped heads. Same round golden eyes. Sliding out of J.J.’s attempt to pin him – not a chance, big brother – Seth streaked up the steps, J.J. a bound behind. Their paws skidded on the polished floor of the great room, scoring grooves in the hardwood. “Jesus!” Marshall yelled, leaping up from the couch as the jaguars raced around it, snapping at one another with teeth that could literally crunch through bone. 208 Cleo just laughed and kicked back to enjoy the show. She had been raised with werekin. She could distinguish a romp from a brawl. J.J. pounced. Seth batted his snout with a paw – the big cat equivalent of a punch to the nose. Snarling, the black jaguar backed away. Seth laid his ears back and rose up on his hind legs, taking a swipe at J.J.’s flank before racing up the stairs, to the second floor. J.J. overtook him at the top and pinned him that time, briefly, only to be shaken off by a neat heave of Seth’s shoulders. Seth rounded on him, roaring, and the black jaguar sprang effortlessly onto the banister, coiled his legs under him, and jumped, skinning in midair. Marshall cried out. Even Cleo gasped. J.J.’s hand shot out, catching the base of the iron chandelier. He swung onto it, and with inhuman grace, leapt onto the sunken bar. His eyes were dancing, bandana askew on his golden head. “Well?” he called up. “Are you coming down, or do I have to come up and get you?” Seth roared, then skinned – raced down the steps – and leapt onto the bar, scissor-kicking as he came down. They fought along the countertops, kicks, jabs, punches, the movements a blur. Seth stumbled into the dish drainer, smashing plates and cups into powdery shards; J.J.’s elbow connected with his ribs, and before Seth knew it, his legs had been swept out from under him and he was crashing to the floor, flat on his back amidst broken crockery. He groaned, rolling onto his side as he waited for the room to stop spinning. The kitchen was a shambles. Broken dishes in the sink. Chinese takeout splattered on the walls. Cupboard doors hanging off their hinges. Bare feet appeared. J.J. knelt, offering him a hand up. Like Seth, he was sweat-soaked, bleeding from a dozen shallow cuts – and grinning, ear to ear. “Just to clarify,” he said, “was that you ‘taking’ me, little brother?” “Your nose is bleeding, brother dear,” Seth said. “So is your head,” J.J. said. Seth fingered his scalp. His hand came away coated in blood; the cut was pretty deep. A human 209 would have needed stitches. J.J. hauled him up by an elbow. “C’mon. We’ll get Doc to look at you.” “I think I’m broken,” Seth confessed on a groan, feeling every one of his cuts and bruises now that he was on his feet again, adrenaline gone. “Well, I hope you heal fast, sweetheart,” Cleo said, surveying the destruction of her kitchen with her hands on her hips. “Because you two have one hell of a mess to clean up.” 210 Chapter Seventeen: A Modest Proposal “You know,” Marshall said, “tonight was the first time I’d ever seen you fight.” Seth turned sideways in the Audi’s seat, sliding the shoulder strap behind him. It was late; cleaning up the kitchen had taken several hours, and then, as the jaguars were starving, they had driven into town for some MoJo’s deep-dish supreme. Marshall was driving Seth home. J.J. had opted to go back to Cleo’s. Seth was hoping he would ask her to prom. Passing headlights showed Seth flashes of blue eyes, an offcenter nose, angular cheekbones – not enough to discern Marshall’s thoughts. It had not occurred to him during his romp that Marshall had never seen him in battle-mode. He had walked in on the end of Seth’s fight against Rambo in the Stewards’ kitchen, but by then Seth had been backed into a corner. At Fort King, he had stayed outside, far from the action of the battle. “How’s the freak-out meter doing?” Seth asked, lightly. “You don’t freak me out, Philadelphia. I’m aware you’re part cat.” Marshall paused, looking left and right before proceeding through the four-way stop at Queens Boulevard, onto Kings Lane. “I just didn’t realize how much you enjoy fighting.” He didn’t sound like he was judging. More like he was trying to square the bloodthirsty werejaguar he had glimpsed tonight with the happy-go-lucky boy he was used to. Seth toyed with a raveling on his jacket sleeve as he cast about for a way to explain. “Werejaguars are warrior breeds,” he said at last. “We aren’t violent by nature, but we are built to hunt. Built to stalk and ambush. Built, essentially, to fight. You know how it feels when you’re on the court, playing an outstanding team, and every shot you make you know you’ve earned?” “Hell yeah,” Marshall said. “Nothing like it.” “Well, for warrior breeds, that’s how it feels to take on a wellmatched opponent. Trumps any high out there. But if you’re in it to kill somebody,” Seth said, “that kind of takes the fun out of it.” And he and J.J. had been well-matched, Seth thought. Although he wondered if they would have been before his dream- 211 walk to Lemuria. J.J. was an even better fighter than Regent, and Regent had never had any problems putting Seth on the mat. J.J. was better trained. But Seth – Seth was supercharged. Lydia’s Escalade was not in the drive. Nor was Dr. Townsend’s Lexus. Marshall, taking full advantage of his ungrounding, linked his fingers through Seth’s, accompanying him to his back door. Captain Hook met them in the kitchen, pleased to have his people home. Seth tossed him a Snausage and Captain Hook led the way upstairs. “He doesn’t look like a zombie,” Marshall said. “But what,” said Seth, “would a zombie dog look like?” “Good point.” Marshall collapsed on Seth’s bed. Captain Hook hopped up beside him, sniffed his fingers, and whined. He probably smelled like magic from handling the grimoires. Which reminded Seth. He fished through his backpack, coming up with the list of Lemurian glyphs he had translated for Marshall. It was a project he had been working on in study hall, taking supreme satisfaction from Dr. Gideon glowering at him from the teacher’s desk, irked by what he had to assume was Seth’s idle doodling. “Para ti, mi amor,” Seth said, presenting the paper to Marshall with a bow. Marshall looked from it to him. “You made this for me?” “Thought it might help with your alchemy studies,” Seth said. Marshall’s nose crinkled up in concentration as he bent his head over the glyphs. Studious on Marshall was sexy, and just as Seth had been itching for a fight earlier, he was itching for something else now. He brushed his fingers through Marshall’s hair, kissed the curve of his ear… “Does this mean I have your permission to apprentice with Aphrodisia?” It was like a slap in the face. Seth recoiled. “You never needed my permission, Indiana,” he said. “Seth, wait.” Marshall caught his wrist; Seth had been turning away, not wanting Marshall to see the hurt in his eyes. “I’m sorry. Thanks, is what I meant to say. This will really help me out a lot.” He smiled. Seth squeezed his hand. Leaving Marshall to his studies, he disappeared into the bathroom for a quick shower. The hot water relaxed him enough to 212 bring out just how banged up he really was; the cut on his scalp had healed itself over, but his back and chest were mottled with bruises that, judging by the tenderness in his muscles, penetrated to the bone. Didn’t stop him from being elated. He had fought J.J. He might not have won, but he had held his own. In his absence, Seth discovered, Marshall had switched off the lights. He was no longer on the bed; he was at the window, staring across the driveway at his house. The wistfulness of his expression froze Seth in the doorway: It was like Marshall was many years older, looking back on the home of his youth with a mixture of fondness and regret. “I never painted over that for you.” Seth jumped. He hadn’t realized Marshall knew he was there. “Painted over what?” he asked, proceeding boxer-clad into the room and rooting through his drawers for pajamas. “That mark on your wall, from punching your dresser. I said I’d paint over it, remember?” “I kind of like it,” Seth said. Looking at the scuff brought back blissful memories of the night Marshall had finally given in to what they both wanted. “So what’s bugging you, Indiana? And don’t say nothing. I hate it when you say nothing and I know there’s something.” “Prom,” Marshall said. Seth looked up from stepping into his sweatpants one leg at a time. “Prom?” he said. “Prom is bugging you?” He didn’t buy it. Prom would not have made Marshall try to antagonize J.J. into a fight. Prom would not have made him bite Seth’s head off for gifting him with translated glyphs. “Not just prom,” Marshall conceded, leaning back against the window. Moonlight shone right through the paper-thin fabric of his shirt, like he wasn’t wearing one at all. “You know Dad has been hounding me to find a date. Last night, I told him I would ask somebody.” So that was why Marshall’s grounding had been lifted. Turning away, Seth pushed his arms through his T-shirt, glad to have an excuse not to look at Marshall. You agreed to this, he reminded himself. Point of fact, he had been the one to make the offer, bestowing his blessing on Marshall keeping their 213 relationship a secret from his parents. Pretending not to be gay meant acting straight. Such as, inviting a girl to prom. “Who are you taking?” he asked. It came out quite evenly, Seth was pleased to hear. “I was hoping to take you.” Seth froze. Okay, he thought. Marshall hadn’t meant it like it sounded. He kept his back to Marshall, as this made it easier to maintain a veneer of detached nonchalance, like he could not have cared less about being escorted to prom, officially, by the boy he was in love with. “So you lied to your dad, is that what you mean? We’ll both go stag, but ride together and sip punch at the same table?” “No.” A depth of tonality in Marshall’s voice, like a piano striking a perfect chord, brought Seth around to face him. “I mean I’ll ring your doorbell, and we’ll take pictures in your living room, and I’ll hold your hand, and I’ll dance with you, every dance if you’ll let me, and when we get home, I’ll walk you to your front door, and I’ll kiss you good night.” Each word had carried him forward, until they were standing toe to toe. Seth backed up, stopped only by his shoulders striking the wall. Marshall placed his hands on either side of him, leaning in with steady purpose. Seth could hardly breathe. “Because like I said,” Marshall finished, roughly. “There are things I want, now.” His breath touched Seth’s lips on that last word, now, a kind of growl, overlain with all that was implied by wanting. Seth managed a nod. Me too. There were things he wanted, too. Slender fingers circled Seth’s wrists, lifting his arms up so they twined around Marshall’s neck. Lashes fluttered against his cheek. Seth’s lips parted, and Marshall did growl then – buried his hands in Seth’s hair and pressed into him, pinning him against the wall. The kiss was soft, softer than Seth thought he could stand with every inch of him aching for Marshall like it was. Marshall’s nose slid along his jaw, his lips finding the places that made Seth shiver, and lingering there; his solid weight was all that kept Seth on his feet as his bones melted right out of his skin. “I love you,” Marshall whispered. It did not take a second’s thought for Seth to whisper back: “I love you, too.” 214 Arms locked around his waist. He gasped as Marshall picked him up – Seth sometimes forgot how strong Marshall was, stronger than he gave him credit for. They were kissing again as they fell across the window seat, scattering throw pillows. The wooden ledge was cold, as was the air seeping in around the windowpane, but Seth hardly noticed. Marshall was finally kissing him as deeply as he could have wanted to be kissed, stealing the breath right off of his lips. “Yes,” he found the air to say. “Yes?” Marshall pushed up, balanced above him on his elbows. Moonlight filled his eyes with silver fire. “What are you saying yes to?” To whatever you’re asking, Seth thought. “Yes,” he said. “I’ll go to prom with you.” “Really?” Marshall sat up. “You mean it?” “No, Indiana, I’m joking.” Seth rolled his eyes. “Yes, really.” Marshall’s dimple appeared. He touched his lips to Seth’s jaguar tattoos, each spot, one at a time. Then to his cheekbone. Then to the corner of his mouth. Seth started to feel like he was melting again, but he turned away, sitting up and pulling Marshall up with him. “What?” Marshall asked, a little breathlessly. Seth swallowed. This was going to be harder than he had thought it would be. But they had just said I love you for the first time. You couldn’t keep secrets from someone you loved. Not secrets like this. You want someone you can be honest with. Someone you don’t have to pretend for. “Indiana, did you ever hear of the Ovid Experiment?” “Yes.” Mouth open to speak, Seth actually squeaked with surprise. “I – really?” “Aphrodisia’s notes mention it here and there. It had something to do with an initial experiment on the Gen-3s, your dad’s generation, and a later experiment with human cloning.” Marshall looked puzzled. “I told you this, remember? I said Dr. Bishop had made advancements in human genetics that would put modern science to shame.” “But that’s all you know?” Seth pressed, cautiously. “You don’t know what the experiments were?” 215 Marshall shook his head. Stillness eluded Seth; he rose, began to pace. The house was very quiet with just the two of them in it. “The first experiment, on the Gen-3s, was inseminating werekin mothers with DNA straight from the Ark,” he said. “It didn’t seem to make any difference in their abilities, and it didn’t produce a Black Swan, so LeRoi scrapped the experiment. Then J.J. and I were born to a Gen-3 and a human mother, the first werejaguars to be born since Lemuria sank – twins, direct descendants of our Totems. That made the Ovid Experiment worth a second look. “One of LeRoi’s enterprising scientists had already been messing around with it, at Dr. Bishop’s old lab inside Fort King. The stated goal was to produce humans with the ability to see werekin – humans that could easily track down werekin in the Underground. What those humans really see is our animus, our life-force. For some reason, hunters are never born with that ability. It is an entirely human trait. “But the scientist who pitched reopening the project to the Partners had another goal as well. He wanted to copy himself. To clone himself. He offered to do the same for them. He told them it would be ‘evolutionarily superior’ to having children, because children are only half of you, half of your genes. These would be exact copies of themselves, down to the very last chromosome, that they could raise as their children, and leave behind when they died. About the closest anyone could come to immortality. The Partners jumped at it, of course.” Marshall’s expression showed only that he was listening closely. The windowpane threw back his reflection in profile, like he had been doubled. “Did the experiment work?” “Not quite the way LeRoi had hoped. The scientist in charge of the project used his own DNA for the first clone, because he had the ability to see werekin. He used the Partners’ DNA for the others, or at least the ones that could pay handsomely for the privilege. But there was no evidence his clone could see auras, so after a few years, LeRoi shut the experiment down again.” Seth stopped talking, stopped pacing, and took a breath. “Jack showed me the files, but the Ovid Experiment is still classified above topsecret. He warned me that telling anyone else could put them in danger. He said I needed to be absolutely sure what the right thing to do was before I did anything.” 216 “And now you’re sure?” Seth nodded. His mouth was very dry. “The scientist in charge of the Ovid Experiment was made a Partner for his efforts. His name was Townsend. Wesley Townsend.” He didn’t know how he had expected Marshall to react to this, but it was not for him to say, simply, “I know.” “What?” It came out plosive. “You know? But you said – ” “I know what I said.” Marshall got up. Turned around. Looked out the window again, at his house. The line of his shoulders was very straight. Seth wanted to go to him, but he stayed where he was, hugging his elbows. “The night those hunters broke in here, the night I first saw you skin, I stayed up until dawn reading Elijah Bishop’s journal. You remember, you had Emery get it from your room and give it to me?” Marshall said. Seth nodded. Every detail of that night was seared into his brain. It was the night he had killed for the first time. “I knew my father used to be stationed at Fort King, as a medical officer. Once I knew what Fort King really was, I started to wonder if he had been involved with Chimera. When I read what Bishop wrote about cloning – I don’t know, it just clicked for me. Why my father has always needed everything about me to be perfect. Why he wanted me to play basketball, like he did, and go to med school, like he did. Why he can’t stand the thought of me liking boys.” “Marshall.” Seth was whispering. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.” “It’s not your fault, Seth. You don’t have anything to apologize for. And don’t worry. I won’t tell anyone.” Marshall turned around. He wasn’t smiling, exactly, yet he didn’t seem angry, or disgusted, or even all that upset. Seth didn’t know what to make of this. Wasn’t sure how he was supposed to react, when Marshall was taking this all so calmly. “So about this prom thing,” Marshall said. “Did you want me to buy you a corsage?” Seth flipped him off, and Marshall laughed. 217 Chapter Eighteen: Lost Souls Nothing much was open in downtown Fairfax on Sunday morning. On their way to Jack’s, Seth swung the Escalade through a Dunkin’ Donuts, ordering coffee for himself and his bodyguard twin. J.J. was becoming a coffee drinker, but they had to monitor his intake. Caffeine made him edgy. Sunshine outlined the spires of the Sacred Heart Academy. The warmer weather had held for the weekend; a few avid runners were out on the cobblestone sidewalks, and some of the landscaped trees were eagerly attempting to bud. Seth parked across the street from Jack’s office, beside the only other car on the street. A ruby-red Porsche Cayman. Nice. Lydia had vetoed the country club as enemy territory – most of the Partners were members – and thus Jack, for the first time in seventeen years, had foregone his champagne brunch at the club to meet Seth at his bachelor pad. Just as well. Seth and J.J. looked like the type of kids who might joyride on golf carts or burn down the pool house. Aiming to appear collegiate, Seth had donned his best jeans (no holes in the knees) and a white button-down shirt. J.J. had on his all-purpose camouflage. A backpack filled with schoolwork was slung over his shoulder. J.J. and Jack didn’t know one another well, a condition J.J. wasn’t keen to remedy; he planned to hole up in the Escalade, leaving Seth and Jack to talk post-secondary education. Lydia was the one who had insisted he come along at all. She seemed to think Jack would be less likely to go homicidal traitor with J.J. around. “Check it out.” Seth whistled as he circled the Porsche. Greentinted windows, all-black leather interior, seventeen-inch spoke rims – two hundred and sixty-five horsepower of pure, unadulterated mechanical perfection. He almost drooled on the hood ornament. “Man, I would kill for a ride like this.” “We could hotwire it,” J.J. said. He was like the bad angel on Seth’s shoulder. “J.J., I am not helping you get expelled,” he said. J.J. looked sour. “Speaking of, did you ask Cleo to prom?” “No,” was all J.J. said. 218 Seth left him with his cell phone, in case he might be tempted to do the prom invitation by text message (not that J.J. texted), and crossed the street. The sign on the door said CLOSED, but the front door was unlocked. Upstairs, Seth found the apartment door ajar. Jack, barefoot, wearing slacks and a sweater, was pacing the living room with his cell phone glued to his ear. He was saying something about student rights. It seemed like a heated argument; he was talking fast, gesturing with his hands. Leaving him to it, Seth indulged his natural curiosity and climbed the living room staircase to the loft. Over the last week, Jack had converted the loft into a second bedroom. The monochromatic color scheme screamed teenager, as did the flat-screen TV and the cube-style bookcase. A black desk with spindly chrome legs crouched like a spider in the corner, topped with a sleek Mac desktop. Seth hoped Jack didn’t have designs on Leigh crashing here. She was still refusing to speak her father’s name. Reconciliation seemed unlikely. A long, arched window provided a view of the river, buttery gold in the sunlight like King Midas had dipped his fingers in it. Seth curled up on the cushioned ledge, feeling the stiffness from his romp with J.J. as a cord stretched down his spine, connecting the crown of his head to the small of his back. A pleasant kind of sore. Overnight his bruises had faded to yellow and green outlines. Marshall had inventoried them that morning, awed by Seth’s capacity to heal. Marshall. Seth traced his boyfriend’s name on the windowpane. Over coffee, Marshall, Lydia, and Seth had talked through the implications of his prom invite. Ultimately, they had decided to make their announcement after sectionals. Lydia had advised the delay, and Seth agreed. Anyone could see Marshall was stressed. Adding coming out to the revelation that he was a clone, on top of basketball championships and midterm exams, did not seem wise. A footfall jarred Seth from his reverie. He whirled around – he had forgotten he wasn’t in his own room, alone. Jack froze on the threshold. Did he think Seth would just tear his throat out in cold blood, after he had tried to save him from Regent and had blown billable hours researching colleges for him? 219 “Sorry,” Seth said, rising from the windowsill with marked slowness. “You just startled me.” And I don’t generally eat people for breakfast, just so you know… “Breakfast is ready,” Jack said. An eclectic spread of leftovers comprised their brunch menu. Succulent cuts of prime rib, wrapped in tin foil from one of the local steakhouses; chocolate eclairs from an upscale patisserie; Beluga caviar; a wheel of Brie and some sesame crackers. Especially for Seth, a bag of Oreos, unopened. He took some of everything, and they ate at the bar. Jack got right down to business, consulting a page of notes. “Here’s what I found on that Commander you asked me to look into,” he said. “Derek Childers joined the Resistance a little over five years ago, in his late teens. He rose through the ranks pretty steadily, became a Commander about six months ago, when Ezekiel Campbell was killed and a seat came open. “The story he gave the Resistance was that he was born in the Underground, never collared. His explanation for the silver powder burns is a near-miss with hunters as a child. The Commanders never questioned this, because he isn’t branded.” Jack paused to dip a bite of prime rib in his au jus sauce. “But here’s what the records we seized from Chimera tell me. Derek’s mother was a werebird, a nightingale, a Gen-2 werekin. She was permitted to live in the human world, but when her son was born a werewolf, she went Underground with him, to keep him from being raised in the Scholae Bestiarii. Ten years later, hunters tracked her down in Detroit. She was killed. Her son was captured.” “And that’s it?” Seth said. “That’s it,” Jack said. “I don’t know why he lied, and I don’t know if he’s your spy. I can say it would have been a safe lie to tell, up until now, since no one in the Resistance has ever had access to Chimera’s records before. But the really curious piece is this. There is no indication Derek Childers was ever registered with Chimera, nor is there any indication he escaped captivity. It’s like he disappeared from the ages of ten to nineteen, when he signed up with the Resistance in New York.” Curiouser and curiouser, thought Seth. He munched a bite of steak. “Does McLain know anything about him?” 220 Jack shook his head. “But Will – sorry, Captain McLain – was only directly involved with the Scholae Bestiarii at LeRoi’s estate. Derek could have been housed in any number of Chimera facilities, even facilities Project Ark was unaware existed. And Derek and Will are almost the same age. Werekin graduate from the Scholae Bestiarii at fourteen, at the oldest, so Will could not have been one of Derek’s trainers. It’s possible their paths might simply never have crossed.” Possible, yes, but Seth had his own theory. He doubted Derek had been raised by Chimera, same as he doubted it had been hunters who had killed his mother. Regent had pulled a similar sleight of hand with Seth, letting him think Naomi had been killed by hunters when he, in fact, had killed her. By his own admission, Seth was not Regent’s first adopted cub. He stowed the envelope of records Jack had tracked down in his jacket pocket, to share with J.J. later. Hopefully Derek’s lies would sway the Commanders into trusting McLain more than him. “More coffee?” Jack offered. While Jack poured, Seth stacked their plates in the dishwasher. There was no outward sign today of the man Seth had seen as Jack had turned his gun on Regent. Jack’s hair was freshly washed, pants perfectly creased, mustache and goatee neatly trimmed. Yet Seth’s werekin instincts picked up on what lay beneath, if only faintly. It was most obvious in Jack’s eyes, windows to the darkness within. Seth found he didn’t mind it. This Jack, the Jack who had been there all along, underneath, was someone he could relate to. They moved into the living room, Seth on the couch, Jack in his recliner. “I’ve been meaning to phone your sister,” Jack said. “Her petition to ban animal dissection was voted down by the school board. The story will be in the paper tomorrow, but I thought she should hear it from me first.” “Is that what you were talking about when I came in?” “It was.” Jack paused. “Actually, I was on the phone with Wesley Townsend. He was the petition’s most vocal detractor. He insists a hands-on introduction to vertebrate anatomy encourages interest in the biological sciences. Breeds a new generation of doctors.” 221 Dr. Townsend would know all about that, wouldn’t he? Sourly, Seth pulled his legs up on the couch. “What’s the next step?” “I tried, without success as you might have surmised, to persuade him to reconsider. Our best bet at this point is to involve the ACLU, make it a student rights’ issue. If Leigh wants me to pursue it.” Leigh would want it pursued. Leigh was part pit bull. “I’ll explain it to her, if you want. Let her know you’re fighting for her,” Seth said. “I appreciate that, Seth, but as I keep telling you, you don’t owe me any favors.” Jack leaned forward, fingers knit around his mug. “Wesley also expressed some…concerns. About Marshall.” Oh no. Wesley Townsend did not get to play the concerned parent card. Seth knew exactly what kind of “father” Wesley Townsend was. “Yeah? Did he also ‘express’ to you that he asked Coach to boot me off the team, to keep me away from Marshall?” “He did what?” If feigned, Jack’s anger was very convincing. He sloshed coffee onto the chair arm, cursed as he blotted at it with a white handkerchief. There was still a pale circle around his pinkie finger where he used to wear his diamond ring. “He must have neglected to mention that. But he did say Marshall has been troubled lately. Refusing to sleep, and when he does, waking up screaming from nightmares. Barely eating, complaining of headaches and stomachaches. His grades are slipping. Then there was the incident at school, with Cameron Foss…” A chisel tapped at Seth’s heart with each word, chipping off pieces. It wasn’t like he had been blind to Marshall’s suffering. Begging Seth to stay the night, just to sleep. Picking at his lunch in the cafeteria, half his food untouched. Slumping on the bench in the locker room after practice, pale with fatigue. All of these things Seth had noticed, but hearing them put together like that, and knowing what Marshall had dreamed… It’s stress, Seth argued back to himself. The stress of maintaining his grades for med school, of leading his team to a championship season. Marshall was his own harshest critic. Couple that with the stress of dating a werejaguar whose life was in jeopardy on a weekly basis, and it was a miracle he hadn’t cracked. “I suppose Dr. Townsend blames me,” Seth said, defensively. “He is concerned about your influence on Marshall, yes.” 222 “Does he know that Marshall knows I’m werekin?” “He’s been fully briefed,” Jack said. Whatever that meant. “But I’m not sure this has anything to do with your…” He seemed to be searching for a word. “Pedigree?” Seth suggested. Jack smiled thinly. “You have to consider how the situation looks to a parent, Seth. You move in next door, and suddenly, his son is in a downward spiral.” “Marshall isn’t spiraling,” Seth snapped. “And if he’s so worried, why is he being such a jerk? Is grounding a form of psychotherapy?” “Wouldn’t be my approach,” Jack agreed, evenly. “But parenting is an art, not a science. Deciding whether to discipline, whether to excuse. With Leigh…Well, girls are easier, for fathers. Your instinct is to protect. With a son, it’s less clear. How do you help a boy become a man?” Jack shook his head. He sounded like he had been studying on that question for some time. “Like when Werner gave you that damn motorcycle. You were so dead-set on driving it, and I convinced Lydia we had to give you the room to grow up, make your own mistakes, if that’s what it came to. Really I wanted to pitch the stupid thing into a ravine.” In spite of himself, Seth grinned. “Weren’t you planning to hand me over to Chimera at the time?” “Yes. I suppose I was.” Jack’s voice was inexorably soft, and not at all certain. Seth looked away as he reached for a packet inside his briefcase. “Now,” Jack said. “About those college applications.” *** Jack had compiled a Top Five list of foreign language programs. Duke was at the top, along with NYU, Stanford, John Hopkins, and UCLA. The list coincided with Marshall’s, down to the letter. Fortunately Seth’s doctored homeschool transcripts made him a viable candidate for such top-tier schools, but, Jack cautioned as he walked Seth out an hour later, he would have to keep his GPA up, do well on his SATs, and nail the entrance essays if he wanted to be accepted. 223 “It wouldn’t hurt to do a summer abroad,” Jack went on, as they stepped out into the fresh sunshine. “I’ll speak to Ingrid about placement options. It’s probably too late for this year, but there’s always next. And if it’s really Duke you’re interested in, I’ll call Coach Evans, have him contact their athletics department.” Seth dumped the armload of college catalogs in the Escalade’s backseat. J.J. was not inside of it; a glance down the street showed him his twin’s blonde head bent over a book inside a coffee shop. “That’s nice of you to offer,” Seth said, “but you’ve done enough, really.” “I don’t mind,” Jack said. Still, Seth hesitated. Ulterior motives aside – and he was not yet convinced Jack had no angle here – he wondered if he wasn’t being hopelessly naïve to even consider going to college. The Resistance was on the brink of war. But, “Okay,” he said. “Thanks.” “Seth, did we or did we not agree that you are not supposed to thank me?” “I’m too damn polite, right?” Jack smiled. “Well, as character flaws go, it’s not the worst one to have. Not as bad as, shall we say, sticky fingers?” He jerked his chin at the Porsche. “I saw you admiring her earlier.” “This is yours?” Swinging down from the Escalade’s running board, Seth ran a hand along the Porsche’s shiny red paintjob. “What happened to the Beamer? Trade her in for your midlife crisis car?” “Just for that,” Jack said, “I might not give you these.” Keys jangled – a sound like angels singing. Seth looked from his step-father’s grin to the sleek red Porsche. “You bought this for me?” “I thought you might be tired of borrowing your mother’s car.” Jack pitched the keys to Seth across the hood. “You can drive manual, can’t you?” Could he drive manual. “I used to boost cars for a living, remember?” Seth said. “I must have repressed that,” Jack grinned. “So? What do you say we test her out?” The keys in Seth’s palm seemed to weigh a hundred pounds. He could not believe he was about to do this. What seventeen-year224 old turned down a free Porsche? But he had to. Accepting a gift like this implied forgiveness. And Jack could not buy his way out of betraying Thomas and J.J. He held the keys out. “Thank you, Mr. Steward, but I can’t take this,” Seth said. “It’s just too much.” Jack understood. Seth could see that: He understood perfectly what Seth’s refusal meant. He nodded, gray eyes the color of iron. Taking back the keys, he turned, and walked away. *** J.J. wanted to take the records on Derek straight to Melody at Fort King. The guard at the gate waved the Escalade through, and Seth parked next to the three-headed fountain. “I wish they would take that down,” he grumbled. “Agathon needs it, remember?” J.J. said. “The fountain is partly how he surveils the perimeter.” Right. The whole communing with the trapped souls of the dead thing. Seth avoided the three sets of stone eyes as they walked to the prison’s front door. The fort was quiet this morning. They came upon Agathon in the rotunda, sitting in front of the Black Swan statue, wings bunched up like papery accordions. His black robe was spread across his knees, a book open on his lap. “The Poetical Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,” Seth read off the spine. “And here I had you pegged as a Marilyn Manson guy.” “Lyric poetry is quite dark,” Agathon said. “For instance – ” clearing his throat, he read “ – ‘life is real, life is earnest, the grave is not its goal’ – ” “Dust thou art,” chimed in J.J., from memory, “to dust thou returneth, was not spoken of the soul.” He patted Agathon on the head as he slunk past. This caused Agathon’s right antennae to stand out at a crazy angle. “Yeah man, that’s seriously dark. I may have to sleep with the lights on now.” Agathon frowned. Seth hid a smirk behind his hand. He sat down on the floor beside the necromancer, looking up at the statue of the Black Swan. “Where are Xanthe and Aphrodisia?” “Xanthe is meditating. Aphrodisia is sleeping.” 225 Seth glanced over at Agathon. He had closed the book, folding it in his huge, bluish-gray hands. The Gen-0s were, in a sense, the werekins’ ancestors, but they were very different from the werekin born to human mothers. In some ways, they were closer to the Totems than their shapeshifting kin. Certainly they were more magical. “Agathon,” Seth said, “do Gen-0s dream?” Agathon leaned one elbow on his knee, chin cupped in his hand. Necromancer in Repose, Seth would have titled the painting. “Seth, do you recall your telepathic fusion with Xanthe?” “You mean when he mind-melded me?” Seth nodded. “Uhhuh. Sure do.” “Our minds are unlike yours. The Alpha Clan does not dream, per se. Dreams are memories stored in human consciousness, accessed along neural pathways available to you only during your REM cycle. We, on the other hand, shift our consciousness to a different plane of existence.” Seth knew some crackheads who would have paid good money to do that. “What do you see, on this other plane of existence?” “It is a blankness. A wiping out of being.” The stone floor suddenly felt very cold to Seth. “Is that what being dead is like?” He didn’t even know why he asked it. Seth didn’t spend much time musing on the Hereafter. But death had been on his mind lately, first with Naomi, then the battle, then Ben, and of course, his O.B.E. “Death,” said Agathon, “is a transference. The body ceases – begins, immediately, to decay. But the soul never ceases. It slips from one plane of existence to another. From one ‘dimension,’ as some term it, to another.” “Like heaven and hell?” Seth was thinking of Naomi, attending Mass, praying to the Virgin and the saints. “I am not a student of theology. But some planes of existence are paradisiacal. Others are – not.” So hell existed. In multiple versions, even. “How do you know which place you’re going?” “That is a mystery beyond my reckoning. And it was what makes resurrection such a delicate ritual. Necromancers do not undertake it lightly. To create a revenant, you must only animate a corpse. Any energy will do. But to raise the dead, to return a soul 226 to its body, you must call back the soul that has departed, and you cannot know where that soul has traveled. You cannot know what form it has taken – if it has inhabited a new body, in another world, or if it has floated in a void, in oblivion. You cannot be certain what will return. If it will be the soul as it was, or if it will be utterly unrecognizable.” In the dream, I was already dead. You were holding me, and crying, and I wanted to tell you not to. That this was something I had chosen. Seth drew his arms around his middle. He felt a sudden need to look away from the statue, to hide from that gentle, lovely countenance that gazed down on him so knowingly. “Then why risk it?” His voice was harsher than he meant it to be. “Why call a soul back?” Agathon looked over at him. His eyes were fathomlessly black. “Because sometimes,” he said, “we cannot let go.” *** By evening, the sunshine along Kings Lane had been swallowed by ominous gray clouds. A rumble of thunder punctuated Seth’s jump shot swishing through the net; Fairfax had enjoyed an unseasonably warm February, and with the temperature pushing seventy, thunderstorms were predicted. Seth could smell the ozone, feel the charge along the fine hairs of his arms. Marshall missed the rebound. The ball bounced over the shrubfence, rolling up against the Stewards’ porch. He trotted over to retrieve it. “Hope you nail some of those against Sacred Heart, Philadelphia,” he said. “We’ll be sending the Warriors home in tears.” “That’s the plan,” said Seth, mopping his brow with his arm. Through the windows he could see Leigh and Whitney in the Stewards’ kitchen making dinner. Meredith and Lydia were at parent-teacher conferences. Seth had voted for pizza, but Leigh wanted to try out one of her vegan recipes. J.J. hadn’t made it home from Fort King yet. When Seth had left, he had still been closeted with Melody. “So, about Connor Burke.” Marshall measured his shot. “Do you think he knows you’re werekin?” 227 “Nope.” Seth rebounded Marshall’s three-pointer, and dunked it. “McLain swears his dad wants him kept out of all of this.” “And you don’t think he can ‘see’ werekin?” “No,” Seth said. “It’s a rare ability. Anyway, last time I saw him, I was glamoured, remember? And McLain wants me that way this time, too.” He kissed the pewter jaguar charm Leigh had given him, etched on the back with glamouring glyphs. Seth thought of the charm as a kind of talisman against evil, like Emery’s St. Francis medal, minus the religious overtones. “Do you think it’s true he’s being recruited by the NBA?” “I wouldn’t be surprised. He’s seriously good.” Ducking under Seth’s arm, Marshall executed a layup, caught his own rebound, and fired off a flawless three-pointer. “The rest of the Warriors are average, though, if that. I was really surprised they beat Montrose at state last year. Fundamentally, we’re the stronger team. Coach doesn’t let us rely on just one player. He insists on team ball. And that,” Marshall said, “is why we are bringing home that state title this year.” “Darn skippy,” said Seth. Marshall’s smile was the definition of thousand-watt. Overnight, he had reverted to his former golden boy self, casting off the moody, snappish version of himself for the straight-laced, kind-hearted boy next door Seth had been so hopelessly taken with, for whom basketball was life. He and Seth had agreed to put their magical lives on hold for the post-season; there would be no more discussion of the Ovid Experiment for now, no further visits to Fort King, for alchemy lessons or anything else, until the Knights were dancing in blue-and-gold confetti at the Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, hoisting aloft a state trophy. The thumping of a heavy base brought Seth around, just as Cleo’s Ford turned into the Stewards’ drive. Emery and J.J. hopped out of the back. J.J. was looking surly, and a moment later, as the truck doors opened and Cleo climbed out from behind the wheel, Seth saw why. Connor Burke was with them. “Well.” Marshall looked bemused. “Speak of the devil, and the devil shall appear.” Seth could not have said why he shivered just then. Connor lifted a hand in an easy wave. “Gees, don’t you guys ever get tired of basketball?” 228 “Not when we’ve got worthy opponents to defeat,” Marshall said. He propped the ball on his hip and shook Connor’s hand, like enemy officers meeting for a parley on the battlefield, each in their separate school colors – Fairfax High blue and gold, Sacred Heart red and black. Marshall was taller, Connor thinner. “What brings you to Castle Estates, Connie? I thought your dad had that big place out on King’s Creek.” “Ran into this one at the mall.” Connor nodded at Cleo. She must have been at Re-Spin, checking in with Emery. Cleo did not shop. “It took some convincing, but I managed to wrangle a dinner invite. I never can pass up a good stir-fry.” Connor pushed up the sleeves of his sweatshirt. “Mind if I join in? I’d like to see that jump shot of yours again, Philly.” “Oh I see,” Seth said. “You’re here to spy on the competition.” Connor just laughed. J.J. started for the house, brushing wordlessly past Cleo – but pulled up short beside Lydia’s rosebushes, every muscle tense. “Did you hear that?” he said. Seth had – a faint beep, beep, beep. It sounded like it was coming from inside the house. Cleo’s hand slid into the pocket of her leather jacket, reaching for the switchblade hidden there; Emery yanked open the truck door, probably going for a gun under the seat. Marshall dropped the ball by his garage. He was grinning. “What’s up, Doc?” Emery said. “I would say,” said Marshall, “that dinner is ready.” Inside, they discovered Leigh at the sink, scrubbing furiously at a charred mess of peppers, broccoli, and tofu scorched to the bottom of a wok. Whitney, balanced on the countertop, was prying the batteries out of the smoke alarm above the fridge. A nauseating smell, like burnt rubber poured onto rotted meat, was wafting through the smoke-hazed air. Seth blinked his watering eyes. Werekin were extremely sensitive to smells. “What is that?” J.J. demanded, his voice muffled – he had covered his nose with his sleeve. “I thought we were having stir-fry.” “It smells like dead skunk,” Emery choked out. “Dead, rotted skunk,” Seth concurred. “It’s tofu,” Marshall said. Leigh banged the wok down on the counter, next to her vegan cookbook. Her auburn curls were frizzing out; the front of her pink 229 sweater was stained with lemon juice. “All of you, shut up,” she snapped. Windows were opened to clear out the smell, and Chinese takeout was ordered; soon they were in the dining room, drinking soda out of Lydia’s good wine glasses. J.J. slouched down across from Cleo and Connor, ignoring the food. Cleo did not look at him as she spooned mu shu pork onto her plate. Her cheeks were tinged with color. Having Connor present forestalled any Resistance talk. Seth was selfishly glad of it. Just once, it was nice to sit around talking about bands and movies and books, without anybody bringing up the alien apocalypse. The college catalogs Jack had given him anchored the far end of the mahogany table. Emery picked up the Stanford one and started flipping through it. “What are you doing after graduation, Emery?” Marshall asked, dumping sweet-and-sour sauce over his basmati rice. His appetite had improved as well. “I’m not really sure.” Emery laid the catalog down. “I’ve thought about the military – ” he meant the Resistance “ – but I might just stay here, work at Re-Spin.” “You could join Chaz’s band,” Seth said. “I hear Listening Korn is in the market for a drummer.” “Not a lot of cash in that, though,” Emery said. “Luckily you have an independently wealthy girlfriend.” Whitney leaned over to kiss his cheek. Emery smiled even as his big ears turned pink. Leigh turned her big green eyes on Connor. “Where are you going to college, Connor?” she asked, sweetly. Connor put his chopsticks down and stretched his long legs out, crossing them at the ankle. He really was a beautiful boy, Seth noted, quite objectively. The window was at his back, dying his shaggy hair gold when the sun emerged, silver when it vanished behind a cloud. Tonight his hazel eyes were tinted gray instead of green. “I wasn’t planning on going to college.” “Going to be a military man, like your father?” It was the first time J.J. had spoken since they had come inside, and there was no denying the baiting edge to the question. Cleo stiffened. Connor’s gaze passed slowly across J.J.’s face, like he 230 was trying to read his expression, but it was almost disconcertingly blank. “I have no interest in being like my father,” he said. Marshall looked down at his plate, a light flush topping his cheekbones. No one seemed to know what to say to such a bald answer, even J.J., so Seth asked, quickly, “Are you really being recruited by the NBA?” When Connor laughed, the light came back into his smile. “I have no idea where that rumor got started. I still have another year of high school to go. After that, I thought I might travel. See the world.” He waved a hand vaguely at the dining room window. Seth was perplexed. Lydia was an army brat; she had an endless supply of stories about trailing her father around the world, from Turkey to Korea, before he had been stationed at Fort King. “Where did you live before you came to Fairfax?” Leigh asked, like she was thinking the same thing. “Right before I came here, New Mexico. My father was stationed there, near Roswell. Before that, I lived back East, with my mother.” “Your parents are divorced?” Leigh’s voice was full of genuine sympathy. “Never married,” Connor said, as he picked up his fortune cookie and broke it in half. He didn’t seem eager to elaborate, or possibly he was just discomfited by the way J.J. was staring at him; in any case, he was the one to say, not long after, that he needed to get home. “Can I use your phone to call a cab?” he asked. “I can drive you,” Cleo said. She had barely spoken during dinner, either, although her silence, Seth felt, was directed at J.J. “Are you sure? It’s a long ways out of town, and I don’t want to break up your party…” Connor said. “I was leaving anyway.” Cleo was firm. That seemed to signal the end of the evening. Cleo and Connor walked out to her truck together in the gloaming light, waving goodbye to Marshall, Emery, and Whitney as they crossed the drive to the Townsends’. Connor jogged ahead to open Cleo’s door. J.J. banged a pot down in the sink as he turned away from the window. Leigh’s failed attempt at vegan cuisine had made quite a mess of the kitchen. J.J. washed; Seth rinsed; Leigh dried. Seth wanted 231 to know what Melody had said about Derek’s fabricated past. J.J. didn’t have much to report; she had promised to present the records Jack had found to the Commanders, but, he said, she had also suggested the records could have been fabricated. Jack Steward had been in LeRoi’s employ for a long while, and LeRoi had ever been eager to foment discord in the werekin ranks. As if they needed an outsider’s help to do that. “I can’t believe Melody trusts Derek,” Seth fumed. “She doesn’t. But that doesn’t mean she trusts LeRoi, or anyone who used to work for her,” J.J. said. “Anyway, Derek isn’t at Fort King right now. He called McLain on not telling them about the stargate – ” Leigh coughed. J.J. glanced at her. “What?” “You’re not really calling it the stargate, are you?” she said. “Why wouldn’t we?” J.J. was bewildered. “Because it’s a sci-fi movie. Kurt Russell? James Spader? Portal to an alien world?” Leigh realized J.J. had no idea what she was talking about, and rolled her eyes. “Never mind. How did Derek find out about it?” “We’re looking into that. But the long and the short of it is, he insisted McLain can’t expect the Commanders to believe he is working with them in good faith if he keeps hiding things from them, so McLain told them about what could be out there in the rainforest, what Ben went in search of, and Derek packed up Blondie – I mean Druscilla – and they took a team down to Brazil this morning.” J.J. sounded about as thrilled by that plan as Seth was. “Was McLain at least going to tell General Burke about Derek?” “I’m sure he will.” J.J. glanced over at the island. The posters Leigh and Whitney had spent most of the day making, with GO TOWNSEND! and GO SULLIVAN! written on them in sparkly blue-and-gold letters, were stacked there, ready to go for the big game. He looked back at Seth. “You’re serious about all of this, aren’t you?” By this, he meant being a regular kid. Who, you know, happened to be a werecat. And possibly a jaguar god, one of two, though Seth had not mentioned that to anyone. “Very,” he confirmed. 232 Leigh shoved a plate into the cupboard. It rattled against its companions. “Don’t you discourage him, J.J. If Seth wants to go to college, there is no reason why he shouldn’t.” “Why would I discourage him? I’m anti-school, not antiintellectual,” J.J. said. “Because.” Leigh slapped her dishtowel down on the counter. Her temper had not fully recovered from the tofu-stir-fry incident. “You think it’s selfish for him not to join the Resistance, like Emery.” Was Seth invisible? He was standing right there. He tried to change the subject. “Hey, did anyone hear the one about a termite who walks into the bar – ” “I never said Seth was selfish,” J.J. said. “Not in so many words,” Leigh rejoined, caustically. Seth slunk over to the island and drug out a stool, back turned to the brewing fight. J.J. and Leigh, their fragile truce shattered, went on arguing about him like he wasn’t in the room. “Oh, you’re telepathic now, is that it?” Water swirled noisily down the pipes; J.J. had pulled the stopper on the drain. “You can reach into my mind and see what I’m thinking?” “I don’t have to be telepathic.” A cupboard banged. “You’re always badgering him to pay less attention to school and basketball, so he can train more.” Note to self, thought Seth: Baby sister eavesdropped on their brother talks from the top of the stairs. “Leigh, just back off, okay? J.J. is entitled to his opinion.” “Well, his opinion sucks.” Leigh plopped down on the stool beside Seth. “He wants you to leave here. He doesn’t want you to have a life.” Over his shoulder, Seth saw J.J. fix his eyes on the ceiling. He appeared to be counting to ten. “You’re happy here, Seth, I know you are. J.J. won’t even move out of the basement – ” “I like the basement,” J.J. said, skyward. “He’s biding his time here,” Leigh soldiered on, talking only to Seth, “but when he goes, you will too, won’t you? You’re both planning to run off the instant the Black Swan returns. Off to Lemuria, the werekin motherland, or even farther away, someplace that isn’t even Earth, somewhere humans can’t go. We’re never going to see you again. Do you know what that will do to Mom? It’s just – it’s just going to break her.” 233 Leigh hugged her arms to her chest. Her breathing was shaky. Seth was stunned. He’d had no idea she was holding all of that in. “Leigh – ” “After Dad was collared, he lived in LeRoi’s household.” As one, Seth and Leigh turned to look at their brother. J.J. had stepped back, leaning against the counter. He looked at the floor, not at them, as he went on. “Xanthe was one of LeRoi’s pets. He arranged for Dad to be brought there, where I was, so I could see him every day after our lessons. We had to hide how close we were from LeRoi, but she was gone a lot, and she trusted Xanthe to keep an eye on me. She didn’t know he was working for the Resistance the whole time, just like Dad. Anyway, Dad and I used to play this game. We called it ‘What is Seth Doing.’” Seth made a low sound in his throat, like a whine. Leigh laid a hand on his arm. Her touch was soft, as was her voice. “How was this game played, J.J.?” “One of us would say, ‘What is Seth doing right now?’, and the other one would have to guess. If Dad asked, I would say, ‘Seth is in the park, playing with his friends, taking turns on the slide.’ If I asked, Dad would say, ‘Seth is watching cartoons and eating cookies with a big glass of milk.’” Leigh’s grip tightened on Seth’s arm. He was glad of it. He felt like a black hole was opening, right through the middle of him, and only this connection, to his own flesh and blood, could keep him from being sucked away into it. “My favorite was our birthday. You had the best birthday parties. Piñatas bursting with candy. Gallons of ice cream. Tons of friends. Whatever you wished for when you blew out your candles, it always came true, like magic. On our eighth birthday, you went to the beach. Swam in the ocean and built a sandcastle – collected sea shells – ” “J.J. Oh, sweetie.” Leigh had slid off her stool. She crossed the kitchen and placed her hands over J.J.’s; he allowed this, which proved how upset he was. “Seth, all I’m saying is, I wanted you to have a normal life. School, friends, sports. That was the life Dad and I pictured for you. I know it was naïve. Growing up Underground, I know you didn’t have any of that…” 234 “I had a good life, J.J.,” Seth said, softly. It was the truth. Life in the Underground had had its trials, but for Seth it had been happy, because Ben and Naomi had made it that way. “And my birthdays were awesome.” “I’m glad.” J.J.’s honesty was undeniable. He was not resentful that Seth had grown up free while he had been enslaved. Had the tables been turned, Seth wondered, would he have been as generous? “So you don’t think it’s stupid?” he said. “For me to play basketball and plan for college while the Black Swan is hiding and the Resistance is crumbling – you don’t think I’m being selfish?” “No, Seth, I don’t think you’re stupid, and I don’t think you’re selfish.” J.J. pushed off from the counter, very gently disentangling his hands from Leigh’s. “Seth, I can’t promise you this fight won’t catch you up in it. The other day, at the mall, I know that’s what Doc was really worrying about, and he has every right to worry about it. He’s right. I’m not omniscient. I don’t know what’s going to happen to us all. I can feel something coming, but I don’t know what, and I don’t know when. I don’t know who to trust, besides you. If it seems like I push for you to be a part of this it’s only because I count on you, more than you know. But if you’re happy here, now, then I’m happy for you. I don’t want to take away your chance at the life you want to live. I don’t want to take you away from the people who love you.” Leigh flinched. J.J. didn’t seem to notice. He walked over, resting his hands on Seth’s shoulders. “The Ark, the Black Swan, the Resistance, those are my priorities, little brother,” J.J. said; and though he could easily have spoken in Seth’s mind, Seth found it significant that he chose to speak aloud. “Nobody ever said they had to be yours.” 235 Chapter Nineteen: Before the Storm Will McLain sat up slowly, jarred into wakefulness by the shrilling of the telephone, and checked his watch. Five-thirty. How had it gotten to be five-thirty? He had just sat down for a moment after lunch, to rest his eyes. He rose, stretching, from the couch and walked into the kitchen, to the phone mounted on the wall. He hadn’t bothered to shower after his morning run; his T-shirt was stiff with dried sweat. The only perk of living alone was you didn’t have to smell nice for anyone. “Hello?” he said, into the receiver. “Will?” Lydia Steward sounded stressed. McLain turned so he was looking through his front windows at the Stewards’ house. Lydia’s Escalade was still in the drive. “Cutting it close on making tipoff, aren’t you?” he said. “Yes, well, that’s why I was calling,” Lydia said. “Our power has been out,” McLain glanced at his microwave; the green digital numbers were flashing 12:00, “and Leigh’s hair dryer stopped working. She isn’t quite ready for the game.” “I see.” McLain tried not to smile. “I was wondering – and I hate to ask, I’m so sorry, I know how busy you are, but I don’t want to be late – it’s sectionals, and Seth is so excited – ” “Would you like me to drop her off?” “You are an angel,” Lydia declared, with feeling. “Thank you so much. I’ll just have her give you a ring when she’s ready?” McLain agreed. They said goodbye, and he hung up, sniffed his T-shirt, and headed upstairs to change. He had been planning on going to the game anyway. Burke wanted him to keep an eye on J.J. and Seth. When he came downstairs, in fresh jeans and a clean sweatshirt, he took a seat at the kitchen table, pulling his laptop toward him. It was still open to the medical examiner’s report he had been studying prior to his cat-nap. McLain tipped back in his chair and frowned up at his ceiling. Will McLain was not a man with many illusions left. A few years in the Scholae Bestiarii had shown him the depravities humankind could visit upon innocent creatures. Skinning a 236 werekin alive was nothing he would have put past Ursula LeRoi, or her trusty henchman Werner Regent. But something about Ben Schofield’s disappearance bothered McLain. First it was the phone call to Seth. Ben could have called Fort King for back-up if he had been in trouble; if he’d had a warning for Seth, he could have relayed it through McLain, or Melody, or J.J., all of whom he trusted. Instead he had placed a cryptic three-minute phone call to the one person in his inner circle outside of the Resistance. Then there was that bearskin rug recovered from Werner Regent’s hideout. The blood had matched Ben Schofield’s exactly when run through the Gen-1 database. The tissue sample, however, had been inconclusive. Normally a tissue sample would not have been run once a blood sample had been matched, but McLain had insisted. Because when he looked at the bearskin, he did not see the blurred double image he saw when he looked at a werekin, living or dead, in person or in a photograph. The medical report he had stayed up half the night poring over conceded that the bearskin could be just that – a bear’s skin. McLain had emailed his suspicions to his C.O. General Burke’s reply had basically boiled down to this: Ben Schofield’s whereabouts, living or dead, were not the concern of Operation Swan Song; Ben had chosen to go off the res on a mission of his own, without backup, and Burke’s concern now was convincing the werekin leadership to accept the alliance with the Marines in his unit. He was being pressured by Washington to show results. He wanted to know why McLain was reading medical reports instead of securing the cooperation of the alien race he, Burke, was supposed to be in control of, and while they were at it, why was Ursula LeRoi still at large? It was McLain’s job to bring her in – The doorbell rang. McLain saw a shadow move on the porch. His heart jumped – the shadow was slender, like Caroline’s – but that was just his imagination, he thought; this would be Leigh, sufficiently primped to show her face at her brother’s big game. He hurried down the hallway and pulled open the door, smiling crookedly. “Well, don’t you look – ” “Hello again, Captain.” The woman on the porch was most definitely not Leigh Steward. She wore a long black trench coat over her tailored black 237 suit, and a cold smile that grew as she watched the blood drain out of McLain’s face. Ursula LeRoi brought her pistol up to the level of McLain’s heart. The man standing behind her smiled wolfishly. “Let’s go for a ride, shall we?” *** “Who are you looking for?” Marshall asked. Seth turned from scanning the stands. Marshall was trotting in from warm-ups, adjusting his lucky wristband. He had to shout to be heard; the energy in the gym was electric. Fans in Fairfax High Knights’ blue-and-gold packed the home side. The other side was a sea of Warriors’ red-and-black. The Townsend-Sullivan cheering section – which included Cleo, J.J., Whitney, and most of the Haven kids, as well as Lydia and Meredith – had claimed a bleacher near the Pep Band. Whitney had painted blue and gold streaks on J.J.’s cheekbones, like war paint. He looked completely bad-ass in black jeans and his old leather coat. “I was just wondering where Leigh is,” Seth said, though this was only half the truth. He had been watching for Jack to arrive ever since the Knights had come up from the locker room. The basketball dads had a row directly behind the bench, close enough to shout their opinions on plays to Coach, which Seth was sure Coach loved, but Jack was not among them. Dr. Townsend was there, impeccable as ever in a gray suit of Italian silk. The color set off his honey-toned skin and ink-black hair. Seth looked away before their eyes could meet. He was not supposed to know who Dr. Townsend really was, or what he had done, and he wasn’t sure he could keep the truth off his face if he had to look into those sapphire eyes. “Philadelphia.” Marshall suddenly nudged Seth with his elbow. “Look.” Seth immediately looked to the Townsend-Sullivan cheering section, expecting to see Leigh – and scowled, as he spotted a mane of fiery hair floating like a battle flag among the sea of blueand-gold. Quinn O’Shea was sitting next to J.J. Correction: Quinn was sitting practically in J.J.’s lap, holding J.J.’s hand. 238 “Oh for the love of -,” he fumed. “Can you believe her? Aren’t there rules about PDA in high school? Maybe we can get her thrown out.” He cast around hopefully for Ms. McLain. Marshall was staring at him. “What are you talking about?” “Vixen O’Shea.” Seth raised his voice. Cheerleaders were tumbling off the court, whooping; they were on the countdown to tipoff. “What are you talking about?” “Your step-father.” Marshall pointed to the stands. “He came. And he brought a friend.” Seth turned. Sure enough, Jack Steward was now wedged in among the basketball dads, all of whom were gazing, awestruck, at the balding man in the blue sweatshirt beside him. Seth’s heart did a slow backwards tumble. The sweatshirt wasn’t just blue. It was a very distinctive shade of blue. “Blue Devils,” Seth whispered. “Indiana – ” “Oh man.” Connor Burke had drifted over from warm-ups, probably because he had seen what Marshall and Seth were seeing. Bryce, Topher, Gabe, and half of the Knights’ second string were right behind him. “Is that…?” “Uh-huh,” Marshall nodded. “The scout from Duke.” Gabe whistled. Jack glanced down at the court, caught Seth’s eye, and winked. Seth’s throat was too tight to speak. This gift far surpassed a free Porsche, because it was not a gift for him; it was a gift for Marshall. His chance to secure that scholarship to Duke. The best do-over in history. In unison, the boys all looked at Dr. Townsend, anticipating how broadly he would be smiling – as broadly as Marshall, whose grin was stretched across his entire face. But Dr. Townsend was not smiling. His baby blue eyes, hooded with lashes as long and dark as Marshall’s, locked onto his son’s. Very clearly, like the rest of the team wasn’t standing right there, watching, he mouthed two words. Don’t choke. Marshall spun around and walked onto the court, where the Warriors were assembling. Seth, like the rest of the team, just stared at his back, mortified by embarrassment. “I cannot believe he just did that,” Bryce said, softly. 239 Seth could. Taking a deep breath, he started toward Marshall. His mind whirled as he tried to think of what to say. To know that Marshall understood, completely, what his father’s obsession with his perfection was…It made Seth sick inside, sicker even than seeing J.J. collared. A collar you could escape. The chains Wesley Townsend had bound Marshall with were deeper even than the skin. “Townsend. Hold up.” Cam shoved by Seth, knocking him sideways, into Connor. Seth didn’t think he meant anything by it, for once. Cam didn’t even seem to see him as his hand came down on Marshall’s shoulder. Marshall looked around at him, blue eyes pale as glass. To Seth’s knowledge, Marshall and Cam had not spoken since the day of the fight. He was a little worried two of their starters might be about to get ejected from the game. So he was sufficiently shocked when Cam, with thuggish eloquence, said, “Screw him, dawg. What does he know? He washed out before he ever made it to college ball.” Marshall started to say something in defense of his father, but Cam cut him off. “This is your night, man. He doesn’t get to ruin this for you. Not this. Okay?” A smile edged back on to Marshall’s face. Marshall and Cam had their issues, but a pack was a pack. Mess with one, you had to deal with them all. He looked up to find hazel eyes looking into his. Whatever expression had been on Connor’s face, it was quickly replaced by his laidback grin. “Don’t think this means I’m going easy on you,” he said. *** Leigh was running late. This was like so not her fault, no matter what her mother said. Could she help it that the electricity kept winking in and out? It wasn’t even storming yet, just raining, a little heat lightning off to the north. Leigh had not planned a power outage while she was trying to blow-dry her hair. She scooted Poe off her vanity, suffering a reproachful meow, which Leigh ignored. Evil warlock kitten. How else would J.J. have known she had called Dre Alfaro a freak if Poe hadn’t reported her conversation on that very topic with Whitney? Never 240 mind that Leigh had been saying how terrible she felt. She swiped candy-flavored lip gloss across her mouth, giving her curls one last fluff. She would have apologized to Dre, if he had ever spoken to her after that day. She had tried to catch him after school a few times, but he wouldn’t even make eye contact with her. The doorbell buzzed. Leigh grabbed her purse off the door and jogged down the stairs, calling, “Just a minute!” in what she hoped was a grownup-and-sexy-sounding voice. Her mother was going to die when she saw the blue tank top and denim miniskirt she had changed into, but how often was she going to get to ride, alone, in a car, with Will McLain? Leigh was determined to make an impression. So what if he was twenty-four? She wasn’t going to be sixteen forever. Leigh opened the door, and blanched. “Dre?” “Get inside!” Leigh gasped. Dre, soaking wet, shoved her inside and shut the door, killing the chandelier above the entryway with a flick of the switch. He pressed his eye to the peephole, gripping Leigh’s wrist tightly in one small, icy hand. Leigh hadn’t known werekin could even get cold. Then she noticed the scratches on Dre’s cheeks, like he had tumbled into a briar patch, and the dark red stain on the sleeve of his white T-shirt. “Dre! Is that your blood?” Dre shushed her. “Yes,” he whispered. Before Leigh could ask if he was all right, swore, in a language she didn’t recognize. “They’ve got him.” “Who do they have?” Leigh whispered back. Dre was really freaking her out. “Captain McLain.” Dre stepped back from the peephole. He was ashen, and shaking. How Seth had looked in the infirmary at Fort King after he had been shot, so small and helpless with the enormous Gen-0 Healers surrounding him. In the glare of the street lights filtering through the front windows, Leigh saw the small, round hole in Dre’s shoulder, and gasped. “Dre, you’ve been shot!” “She just clipped my wing,” Dre said, dismissively. “I was on your roof when I saw them pull up. I tried to fly over, to warn McLain, but that hunter saw me, and – ” Leigh shook her head helplessly. Dre was doing that thing where he talked too fast for 241 her human ears to catch all of the words. “Lucky for me she doesn’t have Quinn’s aim. Still hurt like a – ” “Who, Dre?” Leigh resisted the urge to shake him. “Who has McLain?” Dre started to answer, but stopped, as a board creaked on the porch. Leigh’s legs turned to jelly. She stared at the doorknob. Had Dre locked it? It started to turn; oh God, no, he hadn’t – “Back door,” Dre all but breathed, turning Leigh by the shoulders and steering her toward the kitchen. About the time they crossed the threshold, the lights went out. Leigh screamed. She didn’t mean to; it was instinctive, and probably would have gotten them killed if Dre hadn’t clamped a hand over her mouth before a single sound could escape, as though he had known she was going to scream. Leigh could feel his heart beating like a sparrow’s wing through his wet shirt. “Quietly,” he breathed, in her ear. Leigh nodded. They crept through the pitch-black kitchen. Dre moved soundlessly; had it not been for his arm around her waist, shuffling her ahead of him, Leigh would not have known he was behind her. She didn’t even hear him open the back door, just felt him reach around her, saw it swing outward on its hinges. Captain Hook slipped around their legs and streaked off across the yard. Dre made a beeline for the garage. Lydia’s Escalade was gone; Leigh experienced a moment of panic – how were they going to get out of here? – until Dre threw the tarp off something in the corner. Seth’s Yamaha practically glowed in the moonlight. Dre swung a leg over the seat, slotting the key he must have swiped off the peg by the back door into the ignition. Leigh glanced behind her. Circles of light danced in the windows of her bedroom. Someone was inside, searching for her. “They’ll hear that,” she whispered, turning back to Dre. “They’ll hear the engine.” “We’ll just have to drive fast,” Dre whispered back. Dre didn’t look in the shape to drive fast, or to drive at all, for that matter. Wet, floppy hair hung in his eyes; his teeth were chattering, his wounded arm cradled against his chest. “Can’t we just call for help?” Leigh whispered desperately. 242 “I already tried that. The fort’s communications are down. And if their comms are down,” Dre said, darkly, “they’re down.” “You mean…” Leigh’s eyes widened. “We’re on our own?” “Looks like it.” Leigh stared at him a moment before squaring her shoulders. “Wait here,” she said. She heard Dre call her name, hoarsely, as she darted back across the yard. The rain was a fine mist, like a net dropped over Fairfax; every bit of Leigh’s exposed skin was pebbled with gooseflesh. In her tank top and miniskirt, that made for rather a lot of skin. Kicking the Prada heels she had borrowed from her mom’s closet into the bushes, she tiptoed onto the porch, eased open the front door, and peeked around the frame. The entryway was empty. Shadows drifted eerily across the French doors into the dining room, but that was just the old tree in their front yard, swaying in the wind. Leigh crept inside, keeping to the edges of the stairs as she stole up them, her shoulder brushing the wall where their family portraits had hung before she had insisted on taking them down. Her pulse was running a race in her veins. She almost couldn’t believe she made it to the third floor without hands snatching her from the dark. Seth’s bedroom door was ajar. As Leigh slipped inside, she saw something move, across the hall in her room. She ducked down beside the bed, heart thumping. A single green eye glinted under the bed. Poe was hiding out, too. “What was that?” a man’s voice growled. It was vaguely familiar. “I didn’t hear anything.” The woman who answered sounded petulant. “She isn’t here, Derek. She must have gotten a ride with one of her little friends.” “You heard the phone call. Lydia Steward told McLain to take her.” “What does it matter anyway? We’ll have the boyfriend. That will be enough to make him talk.” “LeRoi likes to be thorough,” the man growled. The woman snorted. “More like Gideon wants to play doctor.” 243 Leigh shut her eyes. Their footsteps were drawing closer – if they came in here, there was nowhere for her to hide – “Come on.” The man sounded resigned. “We’ll have to tell LeRoi we missed her.” Their footsteps moved off, down the stairs. Leigh stayed where she was for a full minute, counting down the seconds, listening hard to be sure they had really gone. Jagged bursts of white lightning were strobing out toward Fort King when she dashed out the back door moments later, Seth’s old camouflage jacket, the one from Re-Spin with the 101st Airborne patch on the arm, flapping around her. The katana he kept in a sheath on his dresser was bouncing between her shoulder blades. Reaching inside the jacket, she pulled out a shivering Poe and gently placed the kitten on the grass, beside Captain Hook. Warlock or not, Poe was still a member of the family. “You guys stay out of sight,” Leigh ordered them both, in a whisper, before tiptoeing over to the garage. “Dre?” “Leigh!” A shadow detached from the corner. Dre stumbled toward her. The power was out to their whole street; in the dark, Leigh could see sweat glistening on his forehead. “Where did you go? I tried to skin and fly after you, but – ” “The silver poison wouldn’t let you. I know.” Taking him by the arm, Leigh guided him up against the wall. His skin was now scalding to the touch, his quick, dark eyes cloudy with fever and pain. Leigh slid one of the glass phials out of her bra (really, where else was she going to put it?) and uncorked it. “Drink this.” Dre blinked. Raindrops slid out of his hair, tracking down his cheeks. “Where did you get healing potion?” “Seth has a stash in his room from when he got shot. I got you one of these, too.” Leigh produced a phial of chartreuse-colored potion. Dre’s eyebrows shot up toward his hairline. “Strengthening potion?” He looked pointedly at her chest. “Got anything else I should know about in there?” “Don’t get fresh, Alfaro,” Leigh snipped. Grinning, Dre let her tip the healing potion to his lips. It was a deep purple, like the grape cough syrup her parents used to give her as a child, and from his puckered expression, Leigh guessed it tasted about as bad. He licked his lips, though, and almost immediately relaxed. “Did that help?” Leigh asked, anxiously. 244 Dre nodded. “Thanks.” He tossed his bangs out of his eyes. Dre was not very tall – being a bird, Leigh didn’t see why he would need to be – but he was as tall as Leigh, anyway. She stepped back, not really sure why she was blushing all of a sudden. “Will you be all right now?” “Should be. The bullet passed clean through.” Dre downed the strengthening potion with a shudder. “I’ll take you to Chaz’s. You should be as safe there as anywhere.” A flash of lightning, neon-bright, reflected in Dre’s eyes. Leigh glanced behind her. Out toward Fort King, she thought she had seen something, tall and conical, framed against the clouds, but that was impossible. There were no buildings out by the fort. “Where are you going?” she demanded, as she turned back. “Fairfax High. I can’t get any cell reception, so I’ll have to warn Seth in – hey, what do you think you’re doing?” Leigh had swung onto the bike. She patted the seat behind her for Dre to hop on. “I’m going with you,” she said. “Leigh, I don’t think – ” “Your brother is at Fairfax High tonight, isn’t he?” After a pause, Dre bobbed his head. “Well, so are mine,” Leigh said. Dre sighed. J.J. was probably going to kill him for this. But, as he was pretty sure the only way to ensure Leigh stayed behind would be to tie her up, he swung onto the bike behind her, arms wrapped loosely around her waist. Leigh cranked the ignition, knuckles white on the handlebars. The bike roared to life, and they were off, racing the storm. 245 Chapter Twenty: Endgame “I would just like to say,” said Marshall, “that we are awesome.” Seth lifted his can of Mountain Dew. “I’ll drink to that.” The two of them were sitting on the gym’s stage, legs hanging over the edge, the scoreboard smiling down at them: HOME – 65; VISITORS – 62. The janitors had been through, dust-mopping the court and clearing trash out from the bleachers; their teammates had departed almost half an hour ago. Marshall and Seth should have been at MoJo’s with everyone else, celebrating, but they were waiting on their parents, who were currently closeted in Coach’s office discussing the implications of the Duke scout’s visit. On the vacated court, a portion of the Townsend-Sullivan cheering section had been organized into a friendly game of H.O.R.S.E. This also included Connor Burke. Frankly, Seth couldn’t believe Connor had the energy to still be on his feet. He had played an unbelievable game, making up for his teammates’ averageness by zigzagging up and down the court, stealing the ball from defenders, sinking every shot he put up – Seth had been the only one able to keep pace with him. He hadn’t been kidding about not taking it easy on them. Connor had accepted the Warriors’ loss with such golden boy grace, if Seth hadn’t known better he would have thought he didn’t care all that much about basketball. As the gym had exploded in cheers from the Knights’ fans, he had trotted over to shake Marshall’s hand, and the instant he had emerged from the locker room, showered and dressed, he had latched on to Cleo. Not that Seth believed for a second that last course of action had anything to do with sportsmanship. J.J. kept looking at the other boy like he wanted to knife him. Seth wondered idly if his twin was actually armed. “Dunk it, Bunny Bread!” Cleo called out. Emery was dribbling in for a layup – which he missed. He now had both an H and an O. He flipped the ball to Quinn, who, with smirking confidence, dribbled in, switched things up at the last second, and dunked. “Beat that, player,” she said, swishing her coppery hair back as she passed the ball to J.J. 246 Seth wanted to close her up in the bleachers. So Quinn was gorgeous, athletic, and witty. Seth hated her. Werekin were hardwired for pack mentality, and Miss Vixen was horning in on Cleo’s turf. “Philadelphia? Are you still with me?” Seth tore his eyes away from Flirt-Fest 3000 and looked back at Marshall, feeling, as he turned his head, a sharp pain in his temple, like a needle pricking his brain. A dull throb had started behind his eyes at the final buzzer – a killer tie-breaking threepointer by Marshall, who had popped up on his toes, body curved into a taut bow as he had measured the shot; Seth didn’t know if the gym had really gone silent, or if he had simply been to focused to hear the crowd, but it seemed like the whole school was holding its breath as the ball dropped off Marshall’s fingertips, falling straight through the net with a satisfying swish. Marshall was reclining on the stage now, ankles crossed. Seth rested his shoulders against the wall, his back to the court. Behind him the thump-bump-swish continued. It was doing nothing for his headache. “Why are you sitting over there?” Marshall complained. He patted the spot beside him, looking all, come hither. He had changed into a heather gray sweater and chocolate cords, a color combo that made his eyes the shade of the sky at twilight. Seth was sorely tempted to ravish him right there. “Your parents could come out here any second,” he warned. Marshall mumbled something that sounded like I hate this. Seth bit his lip. “Indiana, I know we agreed not to talk about this, but I was sort of wondering…I mean, if you’re a copy of your dad, do you think that means you’re, like, exactly the same?” “You mean do I think my father is gay?” Seth nodded. Yeah. That was what he meant. “I don’t know.” Marshall sounded like he had honestly given it some thought. “I’ve heard the arguments for the ‘gay gene,’ and I’m not saying there isn’t one, that people aren’t just born a certain way, but I don’t know if everything about us, everything that makes us who we are, is coded into our DNA. And I don’t think it really matters. I don’t think who you love is something you need to justify with genetics.” Seth’s reply was cut off by Coach’s office door opening. 247 Lydia stalked out ahead of Jack, clutching her purse like she might brain somebody with it. Dr. Townsend and Meredith followed, arm-in-arm. Meredith’s syrupy smile didn’t match her husband’s stony glare. Coach dawdled behind them, locking his office, shooting dark looks at Dr. Townsend’s back. Uh-oh, pretty much summed up the situation. Marshall and Seth shared a confused look. Wasn’t this supposed to be a happy night? The Duke scout had visited the Knights’ locker room after the game, congratulating the team and introducing himself to Seth and Marshall. “Real team effort out there, Captain,” he had said, pumping Marshall’s hand. “Exactly what we’re in the market for – team players. And you, Mr. Sullivan.” He had turned to Seth with a slightly awed expression. “Who in the world taught you that jump shot?” His card was tucked in Seth’s pocket now. Marshall had one, too. Seth was planning to frame his and hang it inside his locker. The Shrine of the Holy Blue Devil. Marshall levered to his feet, offering Seth a hand up. “Seth, honey, it’s late,” Lydia said, as she joined them. Her tone was clipped. “Are you riding home with Marshall?” Of course Seth was riding home with Marshall. That was like asking if he was hungry. “Mom? Is everything okay?” “Everything is fine,” said Jack, in that adults-only voice grownups used when they were hiding stuff. He stuck his hand out to Marshall. “Good game, kiddo.” Seth had never heard anyone call Marshall, their alpha, “kiddo.” It reminded him that Jack had known Marshall when he was a little tyke shooting a Nerf basketball at a miniature hoop. “Mr. Steward, wow.” Marshall pumped Jack’s hand enthusiastically. “I can’t tell you how grateful I am. This opportunity – ” “Marshall,” Dr. Townsend called. He and Meredith were halfway across the gym already. Seth noticed the good doctor hadn’t offered to shake his hand. “A word, please?” “Yeah, Dad. Sure.” Marshall smiled sheepishly at Jack, embarrassed by his father’s rudeness, and jogged off. “What’s up?” Seth heard him say. Dr. Townsend rested a proprietary hand 248 on his shoulder, steering him out into the lobby by the concession stand. Seth rubbed the heels of his hands across his eyes. The bompbomp-bomp of J.J. dribbling the ball was drilling into his eardrums. Suddenly all he wanted was to be home, lying down. “Did Leigh ever call?” Jack was asking Lydia. “No.” Lydia’s tone was stiff as cardboard. “But she’s with Will. She’s fine.” “All right.” Jack sounded like he was letting it go simply to avoid a fight. “Seth, good game.” He stuck his hand out. Seth shook it. “I would thank you,” he said, “but I’m not allowed.” Laughing, Jack pulled him in for a one-armed hug. Seth’s forehead only reached his shoulder; for a second he rested his cheek there, feeling like he was three years old again and his dad was picking him up out of the swing, carrying him home because he was too tired to walk. “It was really cool that you came,” he said. “I told you I would.” Jack’s voice was rougher than usual. He cleared his throat as Seth stepped back from the embrace. “Well, I have an early day tomorrow, so…I’ll see you this weekend. Lydia,” he paused, “you take care.” “You too.” Lydia managed to make the pleasantry sound as though she was cursing him. Their postgame party started to break up then. Whitney was ordered to leave with her parents, which she did grudgingly. Coach instructed Marshall to lock up when they left. Marshall, looking drained, flopped down on the stage again. Seth stretched out beside him. “What was all that about?” he asked, meaning the weirdness with their parents. “Nothing that matters,” Marshall said, quietly. He looked up as Cleo’s spike heels came clicking across the court. J.J. and Quinn were still shooting around; Emery had plopped down on a bleacher to watch. Seth looked around for Connor. He spied his blonde head disappearing out the double doors, cell phone against his ear. “Doc,” Cleo said. “Can I steal your boyfriend?” “I don’t know,” Marshall said. “Can you?” Cleo’s laugh was a bright rill of amusement. J.J. glanced at her. His golden eyes were nearer to bronze tonight, amber around the 249 pupils. Seth wondered if his euphoria over their win had been passed along their telepathic connection, like they were hooked up to the same I.V., or if J.J. was just happy in his own right. He walked Cleo out to her truck. Just four vehicles remained: Cleo’s Ford, Marshall’s Audi, Chaz’s clunker van (borrowed by Emery), and a red Mustang. Connor’s ride, Seth deduced. He wondered where Connor had gone, if he hadn’t left. Thunderclouds banked off to the north, black around the edges, promising wind. As Seth lowered onto the tailgate, a flash of lightning, jagged as a monster’s tooth, reflected on the school’s checkered walls. The brightness stabbed his eyeballs. “No thunder.” Cleo frowned up at the sky. “Lightning, but no thunder.” “It’s heat lightning,” Seth said. The midwinter heat wave continued; the temperature was a balmy sixty-five. He leaned back on his hands. “Cleo, you don’t have to take off just because of her. I don’t know what’s going on with them – ” “I think it’s pretty obvious what’s going on with them.” Cleo ground the heel of her boot into a hole in the asphalt like she was picturing Quinn O’Shea’s face under it. A few raindrops splashed onto the asphalt. The looked-for thunder at last growled in the distance. “I don’t know why he likes her,” Seth said, darkly. “I do. She’s exactly his type. Clever. Daring.” “You’re exactly his type,” Seth insisted. “Aside from the small fact that I spent years collaring and killing your kind,” Cleo said. Her voice was toneless. “Cleo, you heard what J.J. said at Fort King during the battle,” Seth said. “He said hunters aren’t to blame for what they’re made to do. He doesn’t hold it against you.” Cleo’s eyes were mostly blue in the dark. “I should go,” she said. “Beat the storm home.” Seth sighed. Cleo climbed behind the wheel. A gust of wind drove rain against the side of the truck; leaning in the window, Seth hunched deeper into his letterman’s jacket. “Cleo, you should talk to J.J. Tell him you love him. He thinks you don’t, and if he knew you did, it would change things.” 250 Cleo looked at her hands, clenched around the steering wheel. “Maybe it’s better if things don’t change,” she said. *** By the time Cleo’s taillights disappeared around the corner, the rain was blowing horizontally across the parking lot. Emery flung the gym doors open for Seth. He dashed inside, drenched and grumbling. Jaguars liked water, but not the cold stinging stuff that fell from the sky. Seth, Marshall, J.J., Emery and Quinn grouped up in the foyer, staring out the glass doors. “It’s like the end of the world,” Quinn said. Seth had to agree. He could just make out the trees in the courtyard, tops whipping wildly in the wind. Rapid-fire streaks of lightning lit the night to noontime brightness, throwing their reflections back at them like they were standing in front of a bank of mirrors. Emery peered upward, scanning the sky for funnel clouds. He hopped back, as a boom of thunder rattled the doors. There was a pop, and a shower of sparks as the transformer across the street exploded in a shower of fireworks; right on cue the overhead lights went out, plunging the gym into darkness. “Well this sucks,” J.J. observed, equably. “We’ll have to wait it out here,” Marshall said. “We can’t drive in this.” They tried to call their parents, but nobody’s cell phone could pick up a signal. “The storm must have knocked out the cell tower,” Marshall said. Seth could tell he wasn’t so sure. Still, what could they do? Emery raided the vending machines for sodas and candy bars, as Marshall and Seth were starving, and Seth picked the lock on Coach’s office, in search of a battery-powered radio. Rain crashed against the skylight, punctuated by roars of thunder. This did little to ease the pounding in Seth’s head. They gathered on the stage, sitting in a cross-legged circle around the radio like it was a campfire. Emergency lights glowed above the exits, bathing the court in sickly green light. What would have been just a minor inconvenience in their own homes was, in the shadowy, echoing gym, the stuff horror movies were made of. 251 Marshall tuned the dial, searching for a weather bulletin. All he could pick up was static. “That’s some interference.” Emery was chewing on his ponytail again. “Could that be from the storm, do you think? ’Cause I’ve never heard of a storm shutting down radio broadcasts.” Marshall switched the radio off. “We’ll just have to wait it out,” he said, again. Quinn was shivering; in the last few minutes, the temperature outside must have plummeted – the gym was like a meat locker. J.J. put his arm around her, murmuring something in her ear. Probably suggesting they go somewhere more private. Seth scowled. “So. O’Shea,” he said. “So. Sullivan.” There was a note of amusement in Quinn’s voice. “You may have noticed we beat Sacred Heart this time without the help of any of your foxy plays. I believe congratulations are in order, don’t you?” “Philadelphia,” Marshall protested. “Don’t listen to him, Quinn. He’s like a grumpy old woman when he’s tired.” “No, he’s got a point,” Quinn said. “You played very well tonight. Both of you.” Slightly mollified, Seth said, “It’s too bad we took down LeRoi too late in the season for Alfaro to join the team.” Angelo had cheered louder than anyone during the game, his bellow echoing off the rafters every time the Knights sank a basket. They would have pounded Sacred Heart into dust had Alfaro been on the court with them. “Be glad it was,” Quinn said, dryly. “I love Angelo, but he has his temper issues. And while we’re on the subject of tempers, nice job keeping Foss in line tonight, Doc. He was almost human out there.” It was true: Cam had played a clean game. For Cam. “At least he didn’t knock Connor out again, like last time,” Marshall said. J.J. grumbled. It sounded like too bad. Marshall looked over at him. “What’s your problem with Connie, anyway? He’s a nice guy.” “I don’t trust him,” J.J. said. 252 Seth found it an odd thing to say. J.J. not liking Connor, given his obvious interest in Cleo, he would have understood. “Why don’t you trust him?” he asked, truly curious. “Because he’s Burke’s son,” Marshall said. Because he was human, being the implication. Quinn looked away. “You know, Doc,” J.J. said, coldly, “maybe you shouldn’t stick your nose in things you don’t understand. When I’m around Connor Burke, I just get this – feeling. I can’t explain it, but Xanthe always tells me to trust my – ” Seth cried out. Pain had just lanced through his temples, sharp enough to make him moan. He fell over sideways, curling into a ball. “Seth! Seth, are you hurt?” Marshall was beside him, rolling him onto his back. “Headache,” Seth whispered. His lips were numb, like a spike had been driven into his brain, deadening his nerves. A sense of impending danger made him want to skin, but when he reached for the magic, to his horror, it wasn’t there; he felt like he was struggling against an invisible force, something that pressed down on him like the clouds he could see pressing down on the city through the skylight. He sensed J.J. close by, crouching protectively over him. “Doc, is he all right?” “Give me a second to examine him, J.J. Philadelphia, open your eyes for me.” Seth, though he had been unaware of closing his eyes, opened them. Light danced across his vision. “What’s wrong with me?” he whispered. “You’re sick,” Marshall said. His silhouette was haloed at the edges – he was holding a penlight, checking Seth’s pupil reaction. “I don’t think this is physical in origin, or J.J. would be feeling it, too. Emery, try your phone again, see if you can get Aphrodis – ” A sharp crack cut off Marshall’s words, too loud and too close to be thunder. Glass dusted Seth’s cheeks; it took him a moment to realize that the skylight had just blown apart, as though a bomb had detonated inside the school. He heard J.J.’s shout of surprise become a jaguar roar; heard a wolfish snarl out of the darkness; heard Emery’s undulating battle cry break off in a gurgling moan. 253 Marshall’s face as he turned away from Seth was colorless, his pupils hugely dilated, black centers covering the blue fields. His lips formed Seth’s name, but the wind rushing in Seth’s ears blotted out the sound. It all seemed to be happening to someone else. Raindrops stung his cheeks. Seth stared up at the clouds, but he was not seeing the sky; he was seeing Fort King, the evergreen trees circling the hillside lashed by wind and rain, lightning strikes illuminating the black stone like firelight rippling on water… Dozens upon dozens of hunters in black camouflage poured out of the trees, into the courtyard, impervious to the driving rain. Behind them marched an army of collared werekin: bears, wolves, hyenas, cougars, leopards, alligators. Seth gasped. His consciousness felt as though it was narrowing, being squeezed into infinitesimal space – bounded in a nutshell. Suddenly, he was looking out into the prison’s rotunda, looking out, he realized, from the eyes of the Black Swan statue that had seemed to grow up from the floor of the prison overnight. He could feel the presence of the werekin spirits inside the Ark, deep, deep belowground, their power reverberating through the statue, tasting of sunlight and seawater, whispering of stars, and worlds beyond them. Footsteps pounded across the marble floor. Marines and Resistance fighters raced into the rotunda, moving to barricade the steel doors. Melody Little and Oswald Harris were amongst them; Ozzie was halfway skinned, a pelt of fur across his back and chest, freckles blooming into orange spots on his downy cheeks. Agathon came behind them, speaking in Lemurian, erecting wards around the foyer. His flat black eyes were lit from within, the color of dying coals. “Agathon!” Seth screamed. “Agathon!” He wanted to beat the inside of the statue with his fists, only he didn’t have fists; he was awareness without form. He experienced a moment of panicky horror, thinking he might be dead on the gym floor, imprisoned in this statue like the souls inside the courtyard fountain; but no, he could still feel his body, somewhere below him, outside of him… Xanthe passed across the limited field of Seth’s vision. The glyphs banding his chest and arms blazed with a fiery light; he was brandishing a silver sword longer than Seth’s arm. The Resistance 254 ranks parted for him as he glided majestically out onto the steps to meet their enemies. A flash of lightning revealed a shape on the hillside: a conical obsidian tower, etched with Lemurian glyphs. The glyphs were glowing white-hot, as though being carved by fire. A cauldron bubbled at the base of the tower; the liquid inside was too dark and too thick to be water, too red to be tar. A tall, spare figure, stripped to the waist, had been lashed to the three-headed chimera fountain. Rain drove into his skin like bullets; he hung limp in his bonds, bronzed skin blackened by bruises. Seth screamed, “McLain,” at the same time a voice inside his head, or inside the statue with him, he couldn’t tell which, screamed, “Will!” Agathon suddenly turned back, addressing the statue, which made no sense. Did he know Seth was in there? “They have come for the Ark,” Agathon said. “We will hold them, Caroline, for as long as we can.” “Agathon, we can’t hold them,” Melody squeaked. She seemed puzzled as to why Agathon was addressing the statue, but then, Agathon was a little nutty about the statue. He read poetry to it. “There are too many! We have to run!” “We cannot.” Agathon’s voice was deeper than the rumbling thunder rocking the fort to its very foundation. “We must protect this place, at the cost of all our lives…” And again Seth’s consciousness expanded. Even as he felt himself be lifted, the collar of his T-shirt cutting into his neck, his mind was soaring above the trees, over the city of Fairfax, the buildings silver specks far below, circled by a ribbon of moonlit river; he sailed on, above the school, a miniature chessboard castle; above his own house, and Marshall’s, backyards split by the tall brick fence; and then, with a rush of feeling that was almost painful, he felt his mind crashing back toward his body – falling, falling, falling, like a shooting star toward the Earth. *** The world was sideways. That was Seth’s first impression. Then he became aware that he was sideways, his cheek resting against the tiles of the showers in the boys’ locker room. Yuck. 255 Mold sprouted along the grout, and there was stuff inside the drain he was afraid to even classify. Water puddled around him, dripping from the shower heads. Seth’s T-shirt and jeans were suctioned to his skin, unpleasantly cold. In the moonlight slanting through the beveled windows, he could just discern the outlines of lockers. Even the emergency lights had blown. He raised his head off his arm to assess the situation. He figured some level of panic was warranted, if his vision had been real and Fort King really was under attack, but before he committed to the freak-out, he wanted to determine how much trouble he was actually in. Someone was lying in a heap in the next stall over. With his right eye weeping around a knot the size of Seth’s fist, Seth almost didn’t recognize him. He was drenched, too, his jeans and sweatshirt stained with darker red patches. “Connor?” Seth whispered. “Good. You’re awake.” The growling voice out of the darkness was accompanied by a hand seizing Seth’s hair and hauling him upright. Seth whipped his claws across his captor’s nose, and was rewarded by a hand cracking across his cheek, knocking him into the tiled wall. He slid down it and stayed there, glaring up at the man looming over him. “Traitor,” he spit out. “Since history is written by the victors, looks like I’ll be remembered as a hero, cub.” The muzzle of a tranq rifle appeared above Derek Childers’ shoulder as he squatted next to Seth. He was dressed for battle in black camo pants and a long-sleeved black shirt – Chimera gear. The silver powder scars were glossy patches on his handsome face. Did he know who was really responsible for those? Did he know who had killed his mother? Seth didn’t think so. Seth bared his teeth. Derek freed a long knife from his belt. “You skin,” he warned, “and I slit your brother’s throat.” The rosettes on Seth’s arms faded. They had captured J.J.? No way. “I want to see him,” he said. Seeing it was the only way he would believe it. 256 He wanted to see Marshall, too. But Seth was hoping Marshall had escaped, and he didn’t want to bring him up to Derek in case he had. Derek whistled. Blondie swaggered forward from the shadows, wearing a dark leather jacket over her jeans. A knife, a pistol, and a whip were secured to her belt. “Hi, kitten,” she purred. “Thought you didn’t work for Regent,” Seth said. “She works for me,” Derek growled. Blondie prodded Seth to his feet. Derek slung Connor over his shoulder like a sack of potatoes. Connor moaned. He looked very young under all of the bruises. Nobody had mentioned collaring Seth. While he wasn’t going to suggest it, he thought it was weird. Chimera usually couldn’t wait to slap a collar on their werekin slaves. His godly reputation must have gone before him, Seth thought. He had freed himself from a collar once. For all his captors knew, he could do it again. Like the locker room, the gym was pitch-black. Seth’s tennis shoes splashed into something; looking down, he saw that rainwater had poured through the busted skylight, turning the court into a shallow lake glittering with shards of broken glass. The rain was a drizzle now, misting through the skylight with the texture of fog. More hunters were fanned out across the sidelines. Seth lost count at forty-six as Blondie (he just couldn’t think of her as Druscilla) marched him out to half-court. There was some serious firepower in this room. Even if he skinned, Seth knew he wouldn’t make it as far as the bleachers without being mowed down by silver bullets. On his knees, wet hair a metallic shade of bronze, was J.J., handcuffed to the Knights’ bench. “J.J.!” Seth cried out. “He’s been tranqed,” Blondie said, as J.J. didn’t stir. His chin was resting on his chest, but he wasn’t collared either, Seth was thankful to see. “Don’t worry. We gave him the antidote. LeRoi wants both of you alive. Now, turn around.” She prodded him around to face the stage. Seth glimpsed something hanging from the opposite goal as he turned; he couldn’t make out what it was in the rain-damp haze of watery light, but at least he didn’t see Emery or Quinn or Marshall anywhere, which gave him hope that they had escaped. 257 A half-dozen bodies, all hunters, were piled up by the stage, leaking blood into the puddles of rainwater – evidence that J.J. had not come along quietly. A long table from the concession stand had been carried onto the stage. Standing over it, arranging evillooking torture implements straight out of the Inquisition, was a pudgy, balding man with bulbous eyes the color of weak tea behind thick, square-framed glasses. Something wrenched inside Seth’s gut. He was thrown back, to a roomful of euthanized cats strapped down for dissection, plastic bags stamped with the symbol of a three-headed monster, a sense of wrongness coursing through him. Have a soft spot for cats, do you, Mr. Sullivan? Perhaps you think this specimen might be a relative of yours? Dr. Aaron Gideon smiled. “Good evening, Mr. Sullivan.” Seth swallowed hard against mounting panic. The situation, as he saw it, was dire but manageable: He wasn’t collared, J.J. wasn’t collared, Connor wasn’t dead, and Emery and Quinn were at large. They would be back with help, pronto, if they could. With any luck they had already reached Cleo’s. Unless they had headed for the fort, Seth thought, the tiny bit of confidence he had just worked up sapping away. Fort King would have been the more logical place for recruiting a strike force. Would they realize the danger before they were swept up in the battle? Did their enemies possess the Ark yet? What Seth wouldn’t have given for just a smidge of J.J.’s telepathic abilities right about now – Focus, cub, Regent’s voice growled in his ear. Seth pulled in a breath, clearing his mind of all but the situation in front of him. The battle at Fort King was not the fight he was in. Derek had dumped Connor at the top of the key. “What do you want?” Seth hissed at him. “The Black Swan, of course.” That was Gideon. He selected an instrument off the torture table. It looked like a dog collar, except the spikes faced inward. He considered it, returned it to the table, and selected an ordinary screwdriver. This was somehow more disturbing. “We know your boyfriend spirited her away after the battle.” Seth managed to scoff. “My human boyfriend? Whose crazy theory is that?” “Mine,” said Derek. 258 Replacing the screwdriver, Gideon picked up a metal claw. Strips of leathery skin were stuck to its spiked tips, dried blood serving as glue. He handed it to Derek, who advanced on Seth with it, his eyes silver as moonbeams. “I started to suspect something that day he vouched for Agathon, insisting the Black Swan had escaped. I did some asking around. Found out Marshall Jason Townsend, age eighteen, of 704 Kings Lane, was reported missing by his mother the night of the battle. Didn’t turn up again for nearly sixteen hours. Plenty of time to stash our little swan somewhere safe.” He turned to the stage. “Doctor,” he said, “the lights.” A switch was flipped. Overhead lights flared, fluorescent bulbs sizzling in the misty rain. Whitish light illuminated their macabre tableau, mauled bodies piled up before the stage, Dr. Gideon presiding over his torture tools like a mad scientist in a bad movie. Slowly, very slowly, Seth turned. The something hanging from the goal, ten feet off the floor with his arms tied above his head, was Marshall. His wrists were bound with twine; blood welled up around the razor-thin wire as it sank down to the bone. Seth could see the muscles straining in his arms as he gripped the crossbar that connected the basket to the backboard, supporting his weight so his shoulders weren’t jerked out of socket. Against his gray complexion, a fresh bruise on his jaw appeared as a smear of paint. More than anything, Seth wanted to skin. He controlled himself by force of will. He could not overpower fifty hunters on his own, supercharged or not. And Marshall was not the only prisoner they could use against him. They had J.J., too. Derek held the spiked claw aloft for Marshall to study on. Seth’s stomach flipped over. “Feel like talking yet?” “I won’t tell you anything,” Marshall grated out. “I won’t lead you to her. I don’t care what you do to me.” “You know, I believe that.” Derek circled under the basket, tapping the metal claw against his palm. “Dr. Gideon here doesn’t agree with me on this, but I keep telling him there’s a certain type of man who can withstand pain, even unendurable pain, in service of a cause he believes in. Do you know what we call that?” “Bravery?” Marshall said. 259 “Cowardice.” Marshall focused his eyes on the scoreboard, color striping his cheeks. “That type of man retreats from the pain. Sinks deep into his mind, waits it out. Because he knows even the worst pain eventually ends in death. The human body can only take so much.” Derek brightened as though an idea had struck him. “Tell you what. Let’s have a demonstration.” He snapped his fingers. Gideon clambered pudgily off the stage, waddling over to Blondie as she hauled Connor to his feet. Seth snarled at them. Blondie flashed him a smile as wolfish as Derek’s. “You’ll have your turn, kitten,” she promised. Connor swayed in Derek’s grasp as Blondie shredded his shirt down the back with her long nails. Marshall was pleading with them to stop. The more he twisted, the deeper the wire sank into his wrists. He fought anyway, ignoring the blood running down his arms, plinking off his elbows into the puddles on the court. Had the three of them really been playing basketball here less than two hours ago? Connor managed to lift his head. Wet hair hung in lank strips across his brow. He did not seem afraid, though he couldn’t possibly have understood what was going on. When had Derek grabbed him, Seth wondered, and why? Did he know Connor was Burke’s son, or had Connor just been in the wrong place at the wrong time? “It’s okay, Marshall,” Connor said. “I can take it. Don’t tell them anything.” Gideon snorted, like he found loyalty unto death risible. He had taken the metal claw from Derek. He held it up now, for Marshall to inspect. “This,” he said, in the same voice he used to lecture in class, “is a Spanish tickler. So called because it tickles you pink. Or, rather, red.” Blondie and Derek seized Connor’s shoulders, holding him in place as he struggled. Gideon pressed the spiked tips into the small of Connor’s back – Seth sucked in a breath – and raked upward, separating flesh from bone all the way up his spine. Connor’s scream was awful. “God, please, please stop,” Marshall was begging. “Please.” “Now that’s the type I had you pegged for.” Derek booted Connor in the ribs; he lay where he fell, breathing in ragged gulps. Blood spread in a pool around him. “You’re a Healer, isn’t that 260 right, Doc? Your own pain you can disconnect from, but the pain of others, that you can’t escape.” He motioned for Blondie to bring Seth forward. Seth didn’t struggle. Better him than Connor if they were looking for a torture victim. He was made to kneel. Blondie eased his soaked T-shirt off over his head. “Werekin are not like humans, Mr. Townsend,” Gideon explained, as Marshall struggled violently against his bonds. “Werekin are designed to regenerate indefinitely. There is no escape into death for a werekin.” He ran his fingertips lightly down Seth’s chest, demonstrating the path the metal claw would take. “If you do not tell us what we want to know, we will take the two of you somewhere no one will ever find you, and we will cut Mr. Sullivan into tiny pieces until you give us the Black Swan’s location. We will begin every morning with his toenails, and work up from there. With enough healing potion, he could survive for years. Probably outlive you.” Seth wanted to say he was lying, but Marshall had studied Healing. He knew it was true. Marshall’s eyes were huge and agonized in his pale face. “Indiana, you can’t tell them,” Seth said, softly. “This is bigger than me or you. You know that.” Seth. J.J.’s voice was the sweetest music Seth had ever heard. He glanced at his twin – still handcuffed, chin still resting on his chest, still unable to skin with the silver poison in his veins, yet the gold slivers above his cheekbones told Seth his eyes were half-open. The only way to keep J.J. down would have been to kill him. LeRoi should have known that. Help is coming, J.J. said. Seth filled his mind with those three precious words as Derek stepped around in front of him, watching Gideon place the tips of the metal claw just above Seth’s belly button. Seth said, “Where’s Regent?” Derek’s wolfish smile dimmed – just for a second, but it solidified Seth’s strategy. “He’s not around to save you this time,” Derek growled, “that’s all you need to know.” “You want to know what I know, Derek? I know how you got those scars.” 261 Derek blanched. Gideon made an impatient noise. “Mr. Childers, we should really get on with – ” One vicious glance from Derek shut him up. “What are you talking about?” he demanded, of Seth. Seth lifted his chin. “In Philly, I was raised by a woman named Naomi Franklin. She was like my mother. Regent killed her, to get to me. A silver bullet through our window. Then he let me believe hunters did it, and he used that lie to make me trust him.” The tips of Derek’s ears had elongated into points. Blondie looked from Seth to him. “Derek, what’s he talking about?” “Shut up,” Derek snapped. Seth didn’t know if he meant Blondie or him, but he kept going. “Regent came back to Fairfax for me,” he said. “He told me I belong with him. He tried to kill your girlfriend here for whipping me. He forged a sword for me. Has he ever killed to protect you, Derek? Has he ever risked his life for yours? Has he ever given you anything besides those scars – a lesson in what happens if you defy Chimera?” Derek stared at him, the awful truth sinking in. It was a lesson Regent had taught Seth, too, by withholding the antidote he must have had access to after Snowman had tranqed him. Bleeding the silver poison from him, drop by drop. Purging him with vile concoctions that had turned his stomach inside out. For five days, Regent had watched Seth suffer. For five days, he had waited to see if Seth would prove himself worth saving by saving himself. “He wanted to use me,” Seth said, quietly. “Just like he’s been using you. But now you’ve served your purpose, and he’s done with you. He ordered you not to collar me, didn’t he? He ordered you not to kill me. Because I’m the one he cares for. I’m the one he calls ‘cub.’” Seth saw the blow coming. He took it. His head snapped to the side; Marshall made a pleading noise, but Seth shook his head at him, very slightly. I’m handling this, he conveyed, with his eyes. “Keep talking, cub,” Derek growled, “and I’ll rip out your tongue.” “Might be a bad idea,” Seth said, “because then I couldn’t tell you what’s happening at the fort.” Blondie gasped. “How does he – ” 262 “How do I know LeRoi is there right now, going after the Ark?” Seth smiled beatifically. “You’d be astonished at all the things I know, Blondie. You think I don’t know about the Source LeRoi found down there in the Amazon? You think I don’t know that’s what caused this storm tonight, knocked out all the power, all the phone lines?” Seth stood up. No one tried to stop him. “I hate to be the bearer of bad news,” he said, “but it’s not going so well for Chimera.” One-hundred-percent absolute bluff. Seth had no idea who was winning the battle at Fort King. But a lifetime of lying, perfected in the Underground, had given him one hell of a poker face, and around the walls, the hunters came to attention, looking unsettled. Gideon dropped the claw back to his side. He glanced at the exit like he was thinking of making a run for it. “The Black Swan sends me dreams,” Seth said. “When I was passed out back there, she showed me Chimera coming for the Ark. But the Ark isn’t protected by a handful of werekin and Marines. It’s protected by the Alpha Clan. You know Chimera didn’t really kill the Gen-0s, Derek. They’re all still there, all taking orders from Agathon.” “Those freaks?” Blondie practically squawked. “LeRoi kept those freaks around?” Derek was looking at Seth like he wanted to gouge a hole in his belly and rip out his intestines, but he hesitated, trying to peel back the layers of Seth’s mind to get at the truth. This was what Seth was really counting on. Derek was Regent’s protégé, and no one was more adept at saving his own skin than Werner Regent. If LeRoi really did lose the battle, Derek’s only chance for survival would be to go to ground before the Resistance found him. A silver bullet through the heart would be too merciful a death for a traitor like him. Derek drew Blondie into a corner, speaking too softly for Seth to make out the words. Gideon flapped around them, interjecting here and there, increasingly hysterical. At last, Blondie nodded, took the tranq rifle Derek handed her, and raced out the gym doors. “Seth,” Marshall whispered. Seth looked up at him. Sweat was rolling in bullet-thick drops down his boyfriend’s cheeks. “Hang in there, Indiana,” he said. 263 Despite the pain he was in, Marshall choked out a laugh. Seth winked at him. Help is coming, he mouthed. Actually, said J.J., in Seth’s mind, help is here. 264 Chapter Twenty-One: Last Words At first, Seth couldn’t figure out what the light growing inside the smoke-tinted glass of the gym’s double doors could possibly be. Then it separated into two spheres, and he dove on top of Connor’s prone form just as the Ford F150 punched straight through the glass and ploughed over the ticket booths, burning tire treads into the court as it came to a stop beneath the scoreboard. If they lived, Coach would tan their hides. The hunters around the walls let loose a volley of bullets. More vehicles were ramping through the hole Cleo’s truck had made: O’Shea’s battered Jeep, Chaz’s clunker van, a Camaro with bald tires. One very familiar Yamaha FZ1. J.J. rolled underneath the bench; figures were diving out of the vehicles, something large and dark looming up in the bed of the Ford. It bellowed with rage. Connor looked up at Seth. “Go,” he said, through gritted teeth. Seth launched himself off the court, skinning mid-leap. Derek saw him coming and drew the knife from his belt, planting his feet to face the jaguar in his human skin. Seth’s teeth closed around Derek’s arm, on either side of his elbow; he bit down, with all of his jaguar strength. Blood squirted into his mouth. Derek’s scream became a howl. The wolf limped back, favoring his shattered foreleg. Seth drew his lips back from his teeth, swallowing down the saltysweetness of Derek’s blood. Derek was a big, rangy wolf, like he was a big, rangy man. His coat was reddish-brown, brindled with white; the silver powder scars stood out like melted glass on his muzzle. The wolf and the jaguar circled one another at half-court, growling and snarling. Around them, battle raged. Cleo had exploded from the truck pumping a double-barreled shotgun. Emery, armed with what looked like a guitar stand from the back of Chaz’s van, was clubbing one hunter upside the head, pivoting to block the whip another cracked at him. Quinn, standing on the Jeep’s running board, was firing off arrows from a longbow. A small brown falcon swooped around, talons slicing through hunters’ flesh like razors. Olive-skinned Zoe Campbell and her snake-eyed girlfriend 265 Serena Jensen were fighting back-to-back, long knives flashing. More werekin Seth recognized from the halls of Fairfax High, some in human skin, some in animal skin, were fighting hunters all around the gym. Bellows rebounded off the bleachers as the bull, shoulders and chest sagging with muscle beneath hide as black as oil, charged into a line of hunters, goring them with his horns. Derek lunged. Teeth snapped at Seth’s throat; Seth batted the wolf aside with a paw, opening a bloody gash along Derek’s neck. There was a shimmer of air; skinned back into a human, Derek came at Seth with a knife clutched in his left hand. Seth skinned too, and leapt into a roundhouse kick – but Regent had trained Derek, too, and Derek feinted sideways, managing to tackle Seth. They rolled through the water on the court, tearing with their fingernails and teeth, until they fetched up hard against the front tire of the van. Seth had just enough time to see Leigh sloshing through the water to J.J.’s side, something dark and cylindrical bouncing against her shoulder blades, and Marshall dropping to the court as Dre, hanging from the goalpost one-handed, sliced through his bonds, before Derek grabbed a handful of his hair and slammed his skull into the van’s fender. Seth saw a glint of silver inside the red haze across his eyes. He instinctively threw up his arms, managing to catch the hilt of Derek’s knife between his crossed wrists. The blade stopped with the point touching his chest. “Say hi to Naomi for me, cub,” Derek growled, as he threw all of his weight down on the knife, mouth open around a triumphant laugh. His mouth kept on opening, wider and wider. A rattling wheeze issued from it. The fingers gripping his knife opened. Seth stared, uncomprehending, at the crimson stain spreading across Derek’s dark shirt. The knife clattered to the court. Derek fell after it, and that was when Seth saw it, square in the middle of Derek’s back, still smoking: a tiny, perfectly round bullet hole. Seth looked up. On the free throw line, a white-faced Marshall Townsend was lowering a pistol. His father’s Colt .38. Marshall met Seth’s eyes and lifted one shoulder, as if to say, He left me no choice. 266 The hunters had seen their leader go down – about a dozen remained – and now sprinted for the exits. The Haven kids took off after them. Seth saw J.J. and Alfaro, both in their human skins, start to follow, and shouted, “J.J.! J.J., they’ve attacked the fort! We have to protect the Ark!” “I’m afraid you’re too late for that.” The voice came from the stage. Seth turned. There, surrounded by another two dozen hunters, was a slender woman in a tailored black suit. A long fall of dark hair was braided over one shoulder. Her gray eyes pierced the darkness like splinters of mica. The werekin froze. Ursula LeRoi raised her hand to her lips, as though she meant to blow them a kiss. Her fingers glittered; to the untrained eye, it might have seemed she was holding a palmful of faerie dust. “Take cover!” Cleo screamed. LeRoi breathed out. The silver powder lifted off her palm, swirled in the misty air, carried by the wind onto the court in a deadly, sparkling cloud. Cleo and Marshall both dove on top of Alfaro, shielding him with their bodies; the falcon soared above the cloud, to the rafters. Emery skinned, streaking in a blaze of white fur under the bleachers. Someone – J.J. – knocked into Seth, shoving him under the van. They wriggled underneath it as far as they could. Seth heard screams, smelled the burning scent of silver as the powder settled onto the rain-soaked court. J.J. was on top of him. His skin was clammy, his breathing labored. The antidote had yet to purge the silver poison from his system; Seth doubted he was able to skin. This meant their only weapon was the sword, Seth’s katana, sheathed across J.J.’s back. One sword, against a horde of heavily-armed hunters. “We can’t win, can we?” Seth said. J.J. looked away from him, jaw set. Seth read the answer in his silence and felt his heart turn to stone in his chest. He supposed, deep down, he had always known this day would come. He just hadn’t expected to take so many people down with him. The surviving werekin would be collared. The humans among them, Cleo and Connor and Quinn and Leigh, would be killed. LeRoi would dream up some excruciating death for J.J., and Seth 267 would be tortured until Marshall revealed the Black Swan’s location. He doubted he would suffer for long. His pain would be more than Marshall could stand. Seth didn’t blame him. It would have been the same for him. He wriggled out from under the van, surveying the scene. LeRoi stood on the stage, observing with a hungry gleam in her eyes as the hunters herded the werekin back onto the court. Some were down, blistered, writhing in agony. Dre, cradling his arm against his chest, limped along, supported by Zoe and Serena. Silver powder dusted the court, sparkling like spilled diamonds. LeRoi flicked her fingers at Gideon. He rushed forward, grabbed Connor by the shoulders, and dragged him over to the stage. Connor was so still Seth was afraid he might have bled to death, but when Gideon tipped a phial of potion to his throat, he moaned. “Seth.” Seth’s momentary hope that Marshall had made a run for it evaporated. He turned. Marshall was standing at half-court, as calmly as if he were waiting for tipoff. The pistol was clutched in his hand, but the angle of the gun was wrong. His wrist was turned inward, the barrel pressed against his chest, over his heart. Seth got to his feet. He wasn’t fully aware of standing. He felt like he was outside of himself again, like he was back in that clearing having his life-force drained away. “Marshall?” “Seth,” Marshall said again. It was how Marshall sounded when he was smiling, though he wasn’t. He was scrutinizing Seth with an intensity that suggested he was trying to memorize him. J.J. crawled out from under the truck, grabbing Seth’s arm for support as he gained his feet. No, he was saying, over and over, in Seth’s mind. No, no, no. Or maybe those were Seth’s thoughts. No, this wasn’t the way out. No, this couldn’t be happening. Marshall spoke then, words that threw Seth back in time, to a sunny winter day under the trees in Regent’s yard. This is who I am, Marshall had said. It’s like your skin. And Seth had asked him if he would change it, if he could. If he would change his skin. 268 The answer Marshall gave now was different than the one he had given then. “I wouldn’t change it,” he said, and pulled the trigger. *** The pistol’s report echoed back, off the bleachers. Someone screamed – Seth, although her never knew it. Marshall stumbled, one step, looking almost surprised – like however dying felt, it wasn’t how he had expected; then he crumpled, not in slow motion as Seth had seen actors do in movies, but all at once, knees buckling, heading falling forward, arms hanging loose at his sides. The pistol smacked into the court with a metallic thud, splashing water onto the cuffs of his brown cords. Marshall came to rest on his back. His muscles spasmed, a single, violent contraction. Seth’s body tensed in response, jarring him from his horrified stupor. “Marshall!” he cried. Breaking free of J.J., he ran to Marshall and dropped to his knees on the rain-soaked court. The silver powder burned his skin through the rips in his jeans. Marshall clutched at his hand as his back arched. “Marshall,” Seth whispered, as if the sound of his name might convince Marshall to stay with him. Choking sounds gurgled in Marshall’s throat. He gasped (there were no words in it, though Seth strained to hear) and exhaled, on a sigh that sprayed blood over his lips. Seth was looking into Marshall’s eyes as he died. He saw the light inside of him, the spark that made him Marshall, extinguish between one moment and the next. In the dream, I was already dead, and you were holding me, and crying, and I wanted to tell you not to. That this was something I had chosen. To save the Black Swan. To save Seth. Because Marshall had been the only person in the world who could have told their enemies where to find the Black Swan, and once they had her, there was nothing to stop LeRoi from conquering the world. Marshall had chosen to take Caroline’s secret to the grave, beyond LeRoi’s reach. To save them all. Distantly, Seth heard Cleo screaming curses at the hunters, daring them to attack her. Alfaro was bellowing his own challenges, pawing at the ground with his basketball shoes. Seth 269 was too numb to move. J.J.’s hands had closed around his arms; he was hauling him to his feet, saying something to him, urgently, but his words were jumbled, Seth’s brain too fogged to sort them out. The steel hissed as J.J. unsheathed the katana. “None of that, my pet.” Regally as a queen at her court, LeRoi stepped off the stage and stalked toward them, her mass of black hair unwound and fanning behind her like a cloak. There was a deranged fury in her eyes. Once again, she had watched her prize slip away from her. “We will raise him,” she said. Seth’s insides went colder than a block of ice. “J.J.,” he whispered, “does she mean Marshall?” The look J.J. gave him was unmistakable. Not happening. He rose, wielding the katana as hunters leapt off the stage, advancing in LeRoi’s wake with their own weapons drawn. The surviving werekin formed a semi-circle behind J.J. and Seth. Seth did not have to look down to know jaguar spots were standing out on his arms and chest. Magic raced up and down his spine, pins and needles that warred with the numbness of grief at his core. “We will call back his soul,” LeRoi said. “You stay away from Doc,” Emery said, tremulously, leveling his guitar stand like a lance. LeRoi laughed. J.J.’s hand found Seth’s in the dark. His fingers were ice-cold; he was weaker, much weaker, than he was letting on. Seth could feel his frustration, wanting to skin, unable to, like when he had been collared. Tears had tracked through the blood on his cheeks. Seth loved him for that, that he was crying for Marshall. If J.J. had been at top form, Seth had no doubt he could have killed LeRoi, even with her pack of hunters at her heels. But J.J. wasn’t at top form. Having been tranqed once himself, Seth found it miraculous he was standing upright. It’s up to you, Philadelphia. Don’t let me down. LeRoi halted at the half-court line, extending a hand toward Marshall’s lifeless form. Blood had pooled in a crescent shape around him. His fingers were curled in toward his palms – long, slender fingers; gentle, elegant hands. “My necromancers will raise him,” LeRoi said. Her smile was that of a child about to pluck the wings off a butterfly. “Then my telepaths will pry the knowledge 270 from his mind, and once I have it, I will see to it that his soul is banished to the blackest void of the darkest dimension, to languish for eternity.” She would do it, too. Seth had no doubt of that. Ursula LeRoi was as vicious as she was obsessed. She had resurrected an extinct alien race in order to enslave them and use the power of their magical ancestors to conquer the world. She had bred werekin like livestock, ripped children from their mothers’ arms, ordered death and misery for other living creatures on a daily basis. If she had a soul, it was polluted beyond redemption. He looked at Marshall, at the rain drizzling on his cheeks like tears, at his lips still parted around his final breath; and when he thought of those same lips curved into a smile, and of everything Marshall would miss – prom, graduation, med school – and the years stretched out before him that he would have to live without him, black rage filled the place inside of Seth that grief had hollowed out. He began to shake, head to toe. It was the sword in J.J.’s hand, etched with the two jaguars, one light, one dark, that told Seth what to do; that, and the blood, Marshall’s blood, tinting the water at his feet red. Blood held such sway in the lives of werekin. It determined their skins. It called them to one another, to their kindred. It connected them to the Ark, and through the Ark, to their Totems. A werekin’s blood was magic, and Seth simply opened up to the magic in his, to the power buried beneath Fort King – the power Ursula LeRoi and Elijah Bishop had resurrected from Mt. Hokulani, but that had never answered to them: the magical essence of all of Seth’s kindred, contained inside the Ark. He felt a snap in his mind, like a door long closed being opened. His heart began to beat, hard and fast, a tribal drum. J.J. gasped, and Seth knew he was feeling it too. The ground groaned, like the earth was crunching up bones. The gym walls began to buckle, bowing outward, chrome girders screeching, bending until they snapped; the basketball court cracked right down the middle. J.J. lost his footing. Together, he and Seth fell to their knees, splashing into water and blood. LeRoi’s feral snarl rippled into a grimace of astonishment. Seth raised a finger, traced a design in the water on the floor – the glyph he had seen on the jaguar pyramid, on his dream-walk to 271 Lemuria. It glowed like it had been written in flame, flaring in Seth’s eyes as he tipped his head back, looking up through the shattered skylights at stars that appeared as white sand in a black sea. Incredibly, they began to dance, forming two new constellations: one blazed gold, its black spots patches of sky, visible through its tawny skin; one was outlined in silver, a deadly shadow against a deeper darkness. Swirls of light like the tail of a comet smeared the sky, trailing the twin jaguar gods as they leapt through the stargate, charting a path across invisible branches. Seth’s vision distorted, like he was looking through wavy glass. He saw the hunters run for cover, flinging their hands out in a futile attempt to ward off the giant, snarling beasts that pounced on them, engulfing them in a swirl of silver and gold flame. Screams, high and sharp, echoed; when they ended, all that remained were piles of ash on the rain-swept floor, billowing around a screaming Ursula LeRoi in a gritty cloud. The jaguar gods bounded across the gym. J.J. stiffened. The stars reflected in his wide golden eyes; he made to pull away, but Seth held onto him tightly, murmuring assurances – they had nothing to fear; these were their Totem animals. He spread his arms wide, and the jaguar gods leapt, fusing into a single ball of silver and gold light as they passed into the brothers – into them but not through them, joining with their skins. The marrow of Seth’s bones turned to jelly. He could still see the gym, but his vision doubled; he could see the fort now as well, the battle in full sway, Chimera’s army of collared werekin and hunters slaughtering Resistance fighters around the Black Swan’s statue. He saw Agathon booming spells, and Xanthe swinging his massive sword, and Ozzie and Melody dragging wounded werekin and Marines to safety behind them. Then he was zooming downward, into the chamber that housed the Ark. Dozens of figures lined the walls, enormous figures with mottled blue-and-gray skin and flat black eyes, some with snake tails, some with bat’s wings, some with spider legs along their spines. Seth plummeted past them, through the crystal web, inside the orb, which rotated slowly in its sphere of light. For a moment all he could see was light, blinding in its brilliance, and he thought, without much concern, that he might have died, the world disappeared so completely. But he was alive, and the orb began to 272 open, like the petals of a rose, releasing a brilliant pulse of magic like an imploding star. The Alpha Clan joined hands. As one, the Gen-0s spoke, words in Lemurian that crackled in Seth’s ears. Or perhaps that was the sound of the black flames that leapt from the heart of the Ark and soared upward, through the honeycombed corridors, up the elevator shaft, bursting into the rotunda and engulfing Chimera’s army in an explosion of prismatic light that utterly wiped away Seth’s vision. The last thing he heard was a cry of joy from the collared werekin as the silver torcs slipped off of their necks. He fell forward, onto his hands. Seth was aware, dimly, of Leigh saying his name, of Cleo shouting something at LeRoi. But what he focused on was the voice that brushed like a gentle wing against his bruised heart. Find me, Seth, the Black Swan said. Bring me home. *** What happened next would always be more or less a blur for Seth. Alfaro carried Marshall. Seth would have, but the magic he had called upon had hollowed him out like a gourd; he stumbled from the gym to the parking lot on someone’s arm – maybe Leigh’s – while Cleo marched LeRoi ahead of her at dagger-point. The gym was in ruins, girders warped as if by an inferno, the roof completely collapsed. Seth hardly noticed. He couldn’t imagine ever going to school again, or playing basketball, or eating, or sleeping, or doing anything at all, really. “Is Connor okay?” he asked, at some point. Leigh stroked his hair off his brow. He was lying with his head in her lap in the back of someone’s car. “He’ll be fine,” she said, softly. “Nothing Healing potion won’t fix.” Seth nodded and closed his eyes. The next thing he really knew, he was standing in Aphrodisia’s lab, beneath Fort King. He looked around, stupefied. He was still in his wet clothes; they were uncomfortably cold against his ice-cold skin. There was a phial in his hand – strengthening potion. Given that it was empty, and the back of his head was buzzing like wasps had been set loose 273 inside his skull, Seth guessed he had drunk it. He slipped the empty phial into the pocket of his torn, bloody jeans, wiping his sweaty palms down the sides of them. The fire that usually burned in Aphrodisia’s hearth had gone cold. A large cauldron was suspended above it, smoking faintly and giving off green, sulfurous fumes. Xanthe and J.J. were huddled up in the corner, sharing one of their silent communiques. Seth looked around for Leigh, but the only other person in the room was Cleo, who slid her arms around Seth’s waist. Seth leaned back into her. “He was strong,” Cleo whispered. “And very, very brave.” Seth nodded. Speaking would have torn his throat open. Cleo wiped her eyes as she looked at Marshall. His body had been placed on the tall stone table where just days before Seth had watched him crushing herbs for potions with Aphrodisia. His hair was still damp, curling softly on his cheeks; he might have been sleeping, had he not been so unnaturally still. His hands were folded over the wound in his chest. The wound was ugly. Seth tried not to look at it. Hands turned him. Seth blinked. He was facing J.J., who looked as though he might drop right over from exhaustion. Seth had to concentrate to understand his words. “Seth, we have to find the Black Swan. Xanthe says there could be a way to look into Doc’s memories. To see inside his mind.” “J.J., he’s dead.” Cleo’s voice was almost a rebuke. “I know that,” J.J. said, quietly. “But we have to know where he hid the Black Swan. There’s no other way but this.” His eyes implored Seth to understand. Seth did, but he had a condition. “I want to do it,” he said. J.J.’s lips parted. Cleo rested her chin on Seth’s shoulder. “Sweetheart, are you sure that’s a good idea?” “It can be done, can’t it?” Seth swung around on Xanthe. As usual, the telepath was shadowed in the corner, silently observing. Feeling was trickling back into Seth now, like a rusted faucet being forced open. Mostly he felt angry. “When Aphrodisia looked inside of me, to examine my wound, she shared what she was seeing with Marshall. You can do that, too. You can put me inside Marshall’s mind. I know you can.” 274 “Seth, you can trust Xanthe.” J.J. sounded desperate. “He wouldn’t do anything to Marshall. He wouldn’t lie about what he sees.” “I know,” Seth said. And he did. Elijah Bishop had left the Ark in the Alpha Clan’s hands. He had trusted them, and they had made good on that faith tonight by coming together to protect the Ark. “J.J., I have to do this. If I can – if I could see him, one more time – ” You will not see him. And he will not see you. You will not be able to speak with him. He is no longer present to be seen or spoken with. All that made him the person you knew has left this body, and it is only that, a body. Xanthe’s words awoke little flares of pain in Seth’s mind. He lifted his hands to his head, surprised to find his hair sticky with blood, probably from Derek bashing his head against the van’s fender. “Then how…?” “The brain still functions after death,” J.J. said quickly. “Electrical impulses. Thought, memory, feeling, those are impulses. You can access them for a time after death, but we have to hurry. Even that will fade soon.” Fade, he said. Not stop. Fade. Seth took comfort in that. Marshall would not stop. Marshall would fade. It was gentler, somehow. “Seth, if you’re doing this,” J.J. said, “I’ll do it with you.” Seth was too tired to argue, suddenly. He nodded and slumped against the table, not looking at anyone. The bruise on Marshall’s jaw was livid purple against his cold, pale skin. Seth reached out – And hissed; Xanthe had pricked his palm with a pin. He lifted Seth’s wrist in one papery-soft hand, dripping the blood onto Marshall’s brow, and flattened Seth’s palm over the scarlet drops. Seth realized he was shaking. “What will I see?” he whispered. Flat black eyes gazed down into his. You will see what he saw. You will hear what he heard. You will know what he knew, feel what he felt. That is all. That, Seth thought, was the world. J.J. placed his fingertips on the back of Seth’s hand. Xanthe spoke in Seth’s mind, words in Lemurian: words of remembering, 275 words of seeing. The spell rolled over him, and Seth remembered, and saw. 276 Chapter Twenty-Two: Flashback Just drive, she says, when I ask, Where to, like a coachman. So I drive. Looping around Fairfax on the expressway, headed toward the Interstate, thinking I might go east, away from Kentucky, toward Ohio. “Are you hungry?” I ask, ten minutes into silence. She says she is. I look at her, quickly, as I steer onto the exit ramp near the movie theater. She wears a simple linen shift under my letterman’s jacket, which I put on her because it seemed like the thing to do, though Seth says werekin don’t feel the cold. She can’t be older than twelve. She fidgets with the cuffs of the jacket to hide the bracelets of bruises on her wrists. As soon as she stepped out of the trees back at the fort, in the company of that – man, I guess, or creature, that giant with the wings, I knew what she was. Looking at her was like looking at a photo that had been double-exposed, the imprint of one skin on top of the other. Like looking at Seth. But no one could ever be as beautiful to me as Seth. Not even the Black Swan. Without thinking I have brought us to this diner Whitney likes. Archie’s. We ate here after we broke into the fort last night. The night Seth and I kissed, how I’d wanted to kiss him for so long I can’t remember a time before I wanted to kiss him. Now he might be dying. He’s fighting a battle, and once again, I can’t protect him. The bell above the door jingles as we enter. “Can’t Buy Me Love” is playing on the Wurlitzer. We’re the only patrons; it’s late, and the chain-smoking, roller-skating waitress who takes our order frowns at me like she’s thinking a nice boy like myself ought to be home in bed. My father would agree, but I’ll have to worry about that tomorrow. We’re quiet while we wait for my shake and her salad to arrive. She opens sugar packets, dumps them onto her fingers, brushes the crystals onto her napkin. “I don’t have any money,” she confesses, shyly. “I’ve got it covered,” I say. “I’m Marshall, by the way.” “I’m Caroline.” 277 Caroline studies me. I’m used to girls looking at me. Happens when you’re popular. Mom says I could break some hearts if I wanted to. As always the staring unsettles me, and I’m glad for our food to arrive, to distract her. Caroline eats like she’s famished. I order her a plate of fries, too. “I don’t know where to go,” she announces, out of the blue. I stir my milkshake, watching the strawberry ice cream melt into a runny puddle. “Where would be safe?” “Nowhere,” Caroline says. “If you have to hide,” I reason, “you should go somewhere no one would expect to find you.” “You don’t understand,” she says. She sounds hollow. “Nowhere is safe. They can find me. Chimera has spies inside the Resistance and all over the Underground. I thought I was safe, with my brother, but…Anywhere I go, sooner or later, I’ll be recognized. Our blood – our blood calls to one another. And I can’t just run away. My kindred need me. I’m their queen,” she whispers, in a way that tells me Caroline never wanted to be queen of anything. “Caroline.” Her eyes come up to mine. They are large, dark, and oval, as lustrous as the raven hair spilling down her back. Magic shudders down her arms. I hold my breath, waiting for her to shapeshift – skin, Seth calls it – but she recovers her composure. “Caroline,” I say again, “tell me how I can help.” Who am I to her? A stranger. Maybe that’s why she trusts me. I have no reason to betray her. Her plan is crazy, but no crazier than the rest of what has occurred these last few days. I pay our check, and we go back to the car. This time Caroline instructs me to blindfold her. It’s safer, she says, if even she doesn’t know where she is. We have to drive across town to find an all-night pharmacy. Caroline waits in the car. I load up our supply list, as instructed: incense, candles, matches, sleeping pills. The grandmotherly clerk squints at me like she’s trying to picture the kinky sex act I need all of this for. Seth would laugh and buy an extra-large box of condoms. I resist the urge to make up some story so she doesn’t think I’m a pervert. The deepest woods I know is south of Fairfax. Once upon a time, my father took us picnicking there, and Mom would set her 278 easel up by the water and paint us while we swam. I park in a gravel lot and lead Caroline away from the Audi, supporting her elbows. Blindfolded, she places her faith in me, utterly. “Marshall, don’t let me fall,” she gasps. I guide her to the banks of the same river that splits downtown Fairfax, spread my jacket under her because the ground is muddy and girls don’t like messing up their clothes. Nerves and adrenaline are keeping me running at this point. The sun is a pink crescent on the horizon. Is the battle over? Is Seth safe? I light the candles and the incense, then crush the sleeping pills and feed them to Caroline inside a bottle of Gatorade. She is shivering. “I could put my arm around you,” I say. She nods. We sit on the ground together, her head resting on my shoulder, like I hold Whitney after I have a fight with my father and she crawls into bed with me, scared and upset, wanting to make things better for me and not knowing how. “Tell Agathon,” Caroline says. “Tell him I’ll find someone I trust to communicate with.” “You can trust Seth,” I say. I feel her smile against my neck. “You really love him, don’t you?” The intimacy of her question, like she knows Seth, bewilders me until I remember she has been communicating with his twin. J.J. and his spy cat have had a front row seat to Seth’s life these last six weeks. “Yeah,” I say, terrified by how easily the words come. “I really love him.” Caroline’s head droops. The drugs are taking effect. “Tell Agathon to create a central vantage point for my consciousness. I need,” she yawns, “I need to be able to see and hear. I need a connection to the Ark. No one else can know, Marshall, okay? Promise me. No one else can know.” Her words are slurring. “I understand,” I say. “I’ll protect you.” “Marshall?” Caroline clings to my shoulders as I ease her onto her back. Strands of her hair tickle my cheeks, feather-soft. “Marshall, my parents,” her voice drifts away as she slips under the surface of sleep, “my parents were human…” “That can’t be,” I say. But Caroline is sleeping now, deeply. 279 I remove the blindfold. The incense is patchouli; it reminds me of Re-Spin, and Re-Spin of Seth. Panic stirs, swiftly suppressed. Seth will be all right. He has to be. Colorful flat stones line the riverbank. I pick through them for one sharp enough to slice my palm. I hiss at the sting of pain, like at Thanksgiving when I plunged my hand into the dishwater and closed it around the carving knife. Ten stitches, a holiday afternoon in Fairfax Memorial’s ER. Still beat watching football with my uncles. My father drove me, sewed me up himself. Never asked if I did it on purpose. Blood, my blood, drips onto the ground. I dip my fingers in it, trace the glyphs Caroline showed me on her forehead. The spell unties knots in my mind. My brain feels open. Vulnerable. I wonder if this is how madness comes on, a blend of waking and dreaming, past and future, hope and despair. It passes. Caroline is now more deeply asleep than any drug could achieve. She weighs even less than Seth; scooping her up in my arms, I carry her to the car, and we drive slowly out of the woods. Full daylight washes over the fields. Caroline has left it to me to hide her living body somewhere safe – somewhere only I will know to find her. In stasis, she said, she won’t need to eat or drink, won’t experience cold or hunger or pain. The magic in her blood will sustain her, she said, until the spell is released. The streets of Castle Estates are so familiar I traverse them on autopilot. Princess Lane. Queens Boulevard. Bishop Avenue. Kings Lane. Like we live in freakin’ Camelot, pretentious suburban b.s. My house comes into view. No cars in the drive. My parents and Whitney will be out searching for me, checking everywhere before involving the police. Bad press, Dr. Wesley Townsend reporting his son missing. People would talk. Now that I’m here, I want to be gone again, at the fort to check on Seth. Quick as I can, I carry Caroline in my back door, through my kitchen, up my stairs, to my room, which my parents never enter, because I’m a guy and guys need privacy, my father says. I move the duffel bag with my basketball gear over by the bed, stack my shoes under my windowsill, haul a pile of blankets and extra pillows out of the linen closet and place Caroline on them, 280 carefully. Something tells me Seth would find this ironic: his boyfriend, hiding secrets in his closet. I’ll keep Caroline close. I’ll watch over her, while she’s sleeping. 281 Chapter Twenty-Three: The Black Swan Fire trucks roared by on the expressway, red-and-blues flashing. Cleo steered the borrowed BMW – Jack’s – into the entrance of a 7-Eleven to let them pass. A tree branch had obliterated one half of the sign, leaving only the “7” and the “EL.” “They’ll be headed to the school,” J.J. predicted, as the sirens faded. He sounded pale, bled dry by exhaustion. Cleo’s eyes flashed to Seth in the rearview mirror. “Doing okay, sweetheart?” Mutely, Seth nodded. He was just peachy. Aside from being an emotional disaster zone. The three of them were on their way to Marshall’s house to collect the Black Swan. Off the sides of the expressway, the storm’s swath of destruction became visible in sudden flashes. A blue plastic trashcan floating down a flooded street. An uprooted tree resting on a sagging roof. Power had been knocked out to the entire city, cars washed away in flash floods, roofs sheared off by straight-line winds. Chilling to think this was only a taste of what the power of the Totems could wreak upon the planet in the wrong hands. Up front, Cleo and J.J. were conversing in low tones. J.J. was slouched down, combat boots propped on the dash – he had changed into his camouflage at the fort – looking quite feline with his eyelids half-closed. All three were equally banged up, disaster refugees with dirt and blood matted in their hair. The only clean part of Seth was the Manchester United sweatshirt Ozzie had lent him. Clean being a relative term. The shirt stank of beer, cigarettes, and hyena fur. “You think people will believe a tornado hit the school?” Cleo asked. J.J. shrugged. “Look around. Seems plausible. Burke will get the government involved, if he has to.” “What about…?” Cleo broke off, her eyes drifting back to Seth, who curled into a tighter ball. What about Marshall, she meant. What about explaining how Marshall had died. 282 Seth suffered a brief and starkly realistic fantasy of banging on Marshall’s front door, assembling the Townsends in their living room, and announcing that Marshall had shot himself. Whitney, he thought. Oh, Whitney. She had adored her brother. And poor Meredith was one disaster away from never peeking out of her Prozac cave. J.J., Seth noticed, did not answer Cleo’s question. Every stoplight on the expressway was blinking. As theirs was the only car on the road, it didn’t matter much. Cleo drove fast, hesitating at intersections. In record time they reached the wide, quiet streets of Castle Estates. The storm had done its damage here as well. Limbs were strewn across yards; an entire tree had collapsed on the Lees’ front lawn, flattening a section of their white picket fence. An electric company bucket truck was parked under a blown transformer at the end of Kings Lane. Seth stared out his window, seeing the stately homes and three-car garages as Marshall had seen them, the morning he had driven home with Caroline McLain asleep across the Audi’s backseat. Entranced, J.J. called it. Caroline’s twelve-year-old body was suspended in a magical stasis similar to death, requiring nothing, not food or water or light or air, to continue, while her consciousness was awake inside the Black Swan statue at Fort King. Only Marshall and Agathon had known she was inside the statue, observing the Resistance. Even Will McLain hadn’t known. Cleo parked the Beamer in the Stewards’ driveway. A flickering orange glow in the kitchen told Seth his mother was sitting up, drinking tea by candlelight, praying her children had ridden out the storm safely somewhere. Or had Jack already called her, to tell her they were all right, all except for Marshall? By contrast, the Townsend house was sound asleep. No candles burning. No curtains twitching. Nobody pacing the floor. Seth’s claws slid out. “How could they just go to bed? Don’t they even care that Marshall didn’t come home?” “They’ll think he’s with you,” J.J. said. Seth kicked the back of his seat. Right. Dr. Townsend would assume the gay werekin hoodlum next door had enticed his golden boy son – excuse me, his clone – into late-night debauchery in the midst of a world-ending storm. He was probably lying in bed right 283 this minute, stewing on the awful things he would say to Marshall when he came home. Things like don’t choke. Be cool, Philadelphia. Seth squeezed his hands into tighter fists. Yeah, so he was hearing his dead boyfriend’s voice inside his head. Probably a bad sign, if he could have worked up the gumption to care. Cleo and J.J. kept looking at him, then at one another, like they expected Seth to come apart any second. It was annoying, though in their defense, he had lost it pretty good back at the fort after Xanthe had pulled him up from Marshall’s memories. Seth could not explain how incredible that experience had been. To know Marshall, in a way you could never know somebody without being inside their skin. To have Marshall’s every thought, his every feeling, laid open to him for those few precious minutes, like they were his own. What made Marshall Townsend tick? Simple. He wanted to help people. Not in some selfless, Save the Whales sainted martyr kind of way; there were things, as Marshall had said, he wanted. But at his core, Marshall had been guided by the belief that life was about more than accruing wealth and privilege, and he had been driven by a desire, uncolored by idealism, to use his gifts to make a difference in the world, even if that was a very small difference in a very big world. Therein lay the essential schism between Marshall and his father – a difference that could not be coded into DNA. Wesley Townsend was not a good man. Marshall had been. Every chromosome is its own universe, every living creature the result of an amazing cosmic accident, Elijah Bishop had written: That these chromosomes came together to form this creature, with this consciousness, is a miracle we will never replicate, even through cloning. Snap out of it, Philadelphia. Seth became aware of the silence in the car. With an effort, he unwound his arms from around his middle. “Guys, what are we going to say to Marshall’s parents?” “We aren’t saying anything to them yet,” J.J. said. His voice was peculiarly edged. Cleo looked over at him. Her eyes were red-rimmed. “J.J., we have to tell them something. It’ll be daylight soon.” 284 “The flow of information needs to be handled by Burke,” J.J. said, shortly. The chain of command was not something Cleo would argue with. She nodded. “Right now, we need to take the Black Swan back to headquarters, before anybody does anything drastic.” At another time, Seth would have been all over curiosity for what J.J. meant by that. Now he barely picked up on the anxiety bridling his twin’s words. He knew General Burke was flying in from D.C. He knew Clyde Dowling was lobbying for the Resistance to execute LeRoi, take the Ark, and leave Fairfax immediately, severing the alliance with the humans. He had the support of most of the fighters. Melody was attempting to reason with them, insisting they wait to hear what Burke had to say before taking a step that would ensure going to war with humanity. Only the Black Swan could suture the rupture in their ranks. Head in the game, Philadelphia. “All right, people.” Seth’s hearty tone made even him cringe. “Let’s do this.” J.J. looked at Cleo. “Give us a minute?” he said, softly. “I’ll go explain things to your mother,” Cleo offered. Seth was impressed by her bravery. He certainly didn’t want to explain to Lydia that he and J.J. had blown up the school defeating an army of hunters. She might never let them out of her sight again. “Come on, little brother.” J.J. climbed out of the car and opened Seth’s door. “Let’s take a walk.” Seth didn’t much care where he went or what he did. He loped after J.J. across the muddy lawn, past the garage, and into their backyard, refusing to look at the basketball goal in the Townsends’ drive. “I don’t know where you get this ‘little brother’ business,” he said. “We’re twins.” “I was born first,” said J.J. He leapt onto the brick fence. Seth followed him, up and over. “That makes you older by what, thirty seconds?” he said. “Two minutes. Lydia told me.” Seth glanced at him. “You talked to Mom about us being born? When?” “The night Regent collared you,” J.J. said. “She was feeling nostalgic.” 285 Seth remembered that his twin and his mother had held vigil at his bedside that night. Perhaps they had seemed a little less tense around one another sense then, he thought. Walking felt good, actually, now that he was doing it. Moving kept the pain at bay. Seth had discovered that after Naomi’s death. He fell in step beside J.J., letting him chart their path into the woods around Castle Estates. “What else did you and Mom talk about?” he asked. “She wanted to know about how I grew up. She wanted to hear about Dad, and tell me about how they met, and make sure I understood about what Jack had done to her. She’s got this idea that I think she abandoned me, which is just dumb. She couldn’t have broken me out even if she had known I was alive.” “Did you tell her that?” “Yes.” J.J. was flexing his fingers and rolling his shoulders, a sure sign he wanted to skin, but couldn’t yet. Mixed in with the gold of his irises were specks of silver, remnants of the poison in the tranq. “I’m not sure it made her feel any better.” They halted next to a hickory that had split in half, its topmost branches upside down in the mud. Through the canopy, Seth could see the slate-colored roof of their house. J.J. lowered onto a rock while Seth paced, toeing acorns out of the mud. “Seth, I’m sorry to bring this up right now, but what you did back there – awakening the Ark, conjuring the Totems – Before the Commanders start asking questions, I thought we should talk about it. Just me and you.” “Sorry about that,” Seth said, abashed. He had definitely blown the lid on Agathon’s endgame for raising Lemuria. “I guess it would have been better to ease General Burke into the idea of the Ark’s power. Introduce it to him subtly, you know, with, like, a planned demonstration, and maybe some flag-waving…” “I didn’t even know what you did was possible,” J.J. said. “Neither did Xanthe. We had always assumed the Ark would only open for the Black Swan. But it opened for you, because of that glyph you drew.” “Not for me. For us,” Seth corrected, and then he told J.J. what he had not yet told anyone but Marshall: the legend of the twin werejaguar gods, the first werekin of the Jaguar Clan, and Elijah 286 Bishop’s experiment on the Gen-3s, fertilizing their father’s generation straight from the Ark. J.J. examined the still-healing wounds on his wrists, left over from yanking on the handcuffs. Seth wanted to scratch Blondie’s eyes out for tranqing him, but she had escaped, as, it seemed, had Gideon and Regent. Seth had looked for them among Chimera’s ranks as the power of the Totems had swept over them. He had not seen them. “Do you know how you did it?” J.J. asked. “How you knew what would open the Ark?” “Not in any precise terms,” Seth said. “I saw Marshall’s blood, and the idea just came to me. That glyph was the one I saw on the jaguar pyramid when I dream-walked to Lemuria, and I just knew if you and I were joined, like we were in the clearing that night, it would call them to us. Basically I was looking for the fastest way to make LeRoi share my pain.” “Mission accomplished,” J.J. said, dryly. “But you don’t know how you connected to the Ark? How you made it open?” Seth shook his head. With his index finger, J.J. drew a series of glyphs in the mud. “Can you read these?” “Why?” Seth said. “Can you?” “Yeah,” Seth snapped, losing his fragile hold on patience. “They say I’m not in the mood for a magical pop quiz.” Ease up, Philadelphia. He wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t important. Indiana, you don’t even like J.J., Seth thought back. But, with a sigh, he focused on the glyphs. Specifically he focused on not focusing on them, moving his eyes across them right to left and top to bottom, imagining the symbols as an abstract painting – something whose meaning could only be seen, not read. As though a voice was whispering to him, the words became clear: I am she that controlleth tongues; I am she that maketh the seas to swell and the skies to open and the earth to shake. “That’s right,” J.J. said, and Seth realized he had spoken aloud. “These are the symbols for the White Swan. She was the queen of the werekin on Lemuria. She could speak all languages in existences. Her song alone was powerful enough to call up the dead.” “But what does that have to do with – ” 287 “You think in Lemurian.” “J.J., that’s like saying I see with my eyes,” Seth said, impatiently. “All werekin understand Lemurian. Regent told me that.” “He lied to you.” J.J. ran a hand through his matted hair. Seth knew he was itching to shower. Cats hated being dirty. “He gave you Bishop’s journal as a test, to see if you could read those glyphs, and you could. Like you taught yourself to speak French and Spanish and Italian and Russian. When Xanthe looked into your mind, he saw that words and symbols have instantaneous meaning to you. Like they speak in your mind.” “Isn’t it like that for everybody?” Seth was too surprised to be irked that Xanthe had poked around in his head that first day. Lizardman was nosier than an old woman. “No.” J.J.’s tone was flat, final. “It’s a psychic ability, and it is incredibly rare. Rarer than what I can do, even.” Seth was unimpressed. “So, what? I’m, like, Super Polyglot Jaguar? Because in the realm of superpowers, that’s lame. I’d rather have invisibility, or pyrokinesis, or teleportation.” You’re a shapeshifter, Philadelphia. That IS a superpower. Seth made a face at his Marshall voice. He grabbed a low-hanging branch and swung up, tight-roping walking along it. Stillness was beyond him at the moment. Languages had always come easily to Seth. Any language. He had ascribed it to bibliophile genes: Thomas Sullivan had loved books, and in Philly, Seth had spent every afternoon in the public library. Now he remembered Regent handing over Bishop’s journal and instructing him to look at the glyphs, without trying to understand them. Seth had chalked it up to more of Regent’s shogun crap, but had he been testing Seth, seeing if he could read it? Had he known all along what Seth could do? Come to think of it, Seth thought, Regent hadn’t told him all werekin could do what he could. He had just said, “You’re a magical being,” one of his many non-answers, and Seth, numbskull cub that he had been, had swallowed it. He looked down at J.J. “What does speaking Lemurian have to do with opening the Ark?” “I think it’s proof we’re a matched set. What you did tonight – you were right, we did it together. I could feel what you needed me 288 to do, the gateway you needed me to open for you contact the Totems, but you took it from there. You were the one in control.” J.J. sounded awed. Seth found that to be backward. He was the one in awe of J.J. “I wouldn’t say that,” he said, quickly. “I’ve never felt more out of control. If I could have, I would have wiped out every enemy of ours on the planet.” “I know the feeling,” J.J. said. Leaning back on his rock, he looked up at Seth. “Seth, you know that myth your sword reflects, about the two jaguar gods – the one that rules the world of the living, the other the world of the dead?” Seth nodded. It wasn’t a story he could have forgotten even if he had wanted to. “From the time you and I were born, there were questions about what we would be. Lydia told me when Dad contacted the Resistance, they had reservations about letting us stay together. Twin werekin – nobody knew how powerful we would be. If LeRoi could have gotten her hands on us both…” What was J.J. telling him? “I don’t understand,” Seth said. Afraid, though, that he did. “Xanthe had seen what I would be. A telepath. He wanted to train me, but he was duty-bound to stay with the Alpha Clan, to protect the Ark. He couldn’t come to me. So Dad and Ben decided I would come to him, and you would stay with Dad.” Seth actually cried out. “Dad let you be collared?” “He let me be taken,” J.J. said, “so I could be trained. And he let Jack Steward deceive Lydia so he could protect you. I don’t blame him, Seth, and you shouldn’t either. It was war. You have to make sacrifices in war. You have to hurt people, or let them be hurt, even though it’s not something you want to do.” Without giving Seth a chance to answer that, J.J. said, “You know this isn’t over, right?” “Sure it is,” Seth said. “We have the Ark. Now you just add my blood and the Black Swan’s, stir, and Lemuria rises from the bottom of the sea. Then we plug the Source into Mt. Hokulani, and everybody goes home a winner. Right?” “Except we might have to fight a war against humanity to make that happen,” J.J. said. It was how he said it that finally clicked the pieces into place for Seth. He stopped pacing. “J.J., I thought you wanted to raise Lemuria. Now you don’t?” 289 “No. I do. I want to go home.” J.J. said home with a depth of feeling he had never used for Fairfax. Seth tried not to be hurt by that. “But you’ve had the dreams, Seth, I know you have. You’ve seen how that future ends.” “The beach,” Seth said, softly. “The swan finishes her song, and we all die.” “Everything dies,” J.J. stressed. “Not just werekin. All of this,” he gestured, at the toppled evergreens, leaves fanned across the churned-up ground, the stately homes visible through the treetops, “would be gone. “Maybe there will be a day when humankind is ready to be stewards of the kind of power the Totems left behind on Lemuria, but look around. Do you think we’re there yet? Elijah Bishop didn’t. Humans look at Lemuria, and they see one of two things: power, or a threat. They either want that power for themselves, or they want to destroy it so it can’t hurt them. I think that’s why the White Swan sent the Tortoise Clan away from Lemuria before it sank. Tortoises live long lives, and they have long memories. She sent them away with a weapon that could protect the Ark, and she ordered them to use it if anyone besides werekin ever tried to raise our homeland from the depths.” “You’re talking about the Source,” Seth said. On some level, he was amazed to be having this conversation, or any conversation, while Marshall was lying dead at Fort King. “Then why would the Tortoise Clan have given it to LeRoi?” “I don’t think they did,” J.J. said. He rose, a signal he would say no more for now. Seth was too drained to wonder what mystery his twin was caught up in now. He hopped down from his branch, and they started back through the trees together. When they reached the fence around their yard, Seth stopped. From this angle, he could see Marshall’s bedroom window. “You know I can do this,” J.J. said, “if you want to stay out here.” Seth shook his head. He was doing this. He needed to. For Marshall. He needed to bring Caroline home. J.J. touched his arm. I’m sorry. Seth frowned at him, puzzled. “For what?” 290 “You know.” J.J. stuffed his hands in his pockets. “For everything.” *** Marshall’s bedroom was dark, the furniture indistinct blobs. Frozen in the window he had just climbed through, Seth stared around with a sense of unreality. The room was exactly as Marshall had left it that morning, still waiting for him to come home. A television screen frozen on Halo. A rental receipt from Monique’s Bridal taped, improbably, to the alarm clock. Handwritten notes for a Trig exam stacked beside a powered-down laptop. Seth forced himself over the windowsill. He walked over to the bed, Marshall’s bed, and took a deep breath before he sat down. This was what he thought about. The day before, twenty-four hours ago. Game day. Before they had defeated Sacred Heart. His last run with Marshall. A ghostly moon hovered over Castle Park, spindling shadows around the trees. Seth and Marshall were nearing their last mile, soon to be on their cool-down. Marshall swiped sweat off his brow. His T-shirt was soaked. “This is too hot for February,” he complained. “Wimp,” Seth teased. Marshall shoved him, playfully, never breaking stride. They ran in silence a few paces while Seth worked up the nerve to say, “Indiana, I don’t want to jinx anything, but you seem better today.” Unsubtle hint that he had not been doing so well before. Nice one, Sullivan, Seth thought. Marshall, however, responded with wry good humor. “Yeah, well, I decided to stop being miserable about things that make me happy. To be honest, I was starting to get on my own nerves.” Seth considered letting it go at that, but curiosity got the better of him. “What kinds of things?” “Basketball, for one.” They were jogging up Kings Lane now. Marshall slowed to a walk, hands on his hips. “I used to love playing ball. Seeing how you play, just for the fun of being on the court, reminded me that it’s a game. Why do it if you don’t enjoy it?” 291 “Anything else?” Seth was fishing a little, he could admit it. “Well, med school. Being a doctor is something I want, but I forgot that somewhere along the line. Studying with Aphrodisia made me remember it.” The warmth in his voice was unmistakable. They had stopped at the Townsends’ mailbox; Marshall passed Seth his bottle of water to swig from. “You really like Aphrodisia, don’t you?” Seth said. “I do. She’s an incredible teacher. In just a few weeks, I’ve learned so much about healing. It’s, like, I don’t know, like she helped me find my passion, or whatever.” Marshall ducked his head, embarrassed by his own admission, but Seth understood. Medicine was important to Marshall. Part of what made him who he was. “So you’re going to keep studying alchemy with her?” “Absolutely.” Marshall downed the last of the water. Seth pushed off the mailbox, stretching his arms up over his head. “Well, for what it’s worth, I’m glad you’re happier,” he said. “Seth. Wait.” Marshall reached out, catching Seth’s wrist. “I wasn’t finished,” he said, softly. “Oh,” Seth managed, suddenly out of breath. “This – this thing we have. You and me.” Marshall paused. Seth couldn’t look away from him. “I’ve been ruining it for myself, worrying what people will say instead of just going with it. And you can’t…Seth, I can’t tell you how much I don’t want to ruin this.” And then Marshall leaned in, right there on the street, for God or anyone to see, and kissed Seth – a long, slow, smoldering kiss that tasted of salt and promises; and Seth had known this was not something Marshall had thought about, or planned. It simply was. Keep moving, Philadelphia. You’re almost there. Seth wiped his damp cheeks with the back of his hand. Rising from the bed, he walked over to the walk-in closet, stepping over a pile of folded laundry. The door was ajar, a blurred outline to Seth’s misty eyes. He took a steadying breath as he reached for the handle. Inside, as he had seen in Marshall’s memories, was a pile of blankets and pillows. On top of them, lovingly arranged with her 292 hands folded and her ankles crossed, as peaceful as if she were only sleeping, was Caroline McLain. 293 Chapter Twenty-Four: Letting Go Stiff from the beating Derek Childers had given him but healing, thanks to Aphrodisia’s potion-work, Will McLain slipped into the rotunda just as J.J. was finishing his account of the fight against LeRoi for General Burke. Burke had already made his rounds in the infirmary, checking first on his son, who was considered critical, then on the werekin teenagers carried in from what remained of Fairfax High. Aphrodisia had assured him they would all survive, thank the stars, though some would carry silver powder scars all of their lives. At Fort King, twenty-eight Resistance fighters and six United States Marines had fallen in battle. In the shadow of the Black Swan statue, the Commanders were ranged around the long conference table: Melody Little, Josephine O’Shea, Clyde Dowling, Ozzie Harris, and Logue Ampon, all that remained now that Marshall Townsend had killed Derek Childers. Dre Alfaro and Emery Little were seated on either side of J.J., across from the Commanders. J.J. was looking surly. Cleo stood against the wall, watching him, as she always did. Xanthe and Agathon had drifted in as well. The Gen-0s remained near the door, Xanthe’s long tail curled around his legs. The observers who had been allowed in eyed them uneasily. Some of the observers were there by choice. Jack and Lydia Steward. Ingrid McLain. Teachers from Fairfax High, who kept watch over the werekin students in their classes: Evelyn Janowitz, Sergeant Ray Evans, Geoffrey Talbot. Others, men and women in expensive suits, had been brought in under military escort, and would leave again only after they convinced Burke they had had no contact with Ursula LeRoi over the last four weeks. To a person, the Partners did not look pleased to be there, Wesley Townsend less so than any. He had shed no tears when told about his son. Had not even asked to see the body. General David Burke had arrived in fatigues, and looked as big as a tank even beside Clyde Dowling. “So what you’re telling me,” Burke said, in his heavy Texas drawl, “is that you and your brother 294 were responsible for opening the Ark? The Commanders did not issue the order for you to do so?” “That’s what I’m saying.” J.J. did not bother adding “sir” to his reply. Burke frowned. “And where is your brother now? Why isn’t Seth here to speak with us?” “He’s resting,” J.J. said, tersely. “In the infirmary. The magic he called up was stronger than anything we’ve ever – ” “Codswallop,” snorted Clyde, adjusting his bowtie. “None but the Black Swan can open the Ark! This whole business of Totems coming down from the sky is pure fancy.” “Fancy?” Ozzie Harris’ eyebrows shot up; he uttered one of his distinctive laughs. “Stars rearranging themselves into new constellations and coming down to immolate your enemies sounds like a ‘fancy’? I think the phrase you’re searching for is ‘downright disturbing,’ mate. How do you explain all of those collars falling off Chimera’s werekin, if the Totems didn’t do it? Have you ever heard of anything but a key opening a werekin’s collar?” “Thank you, Ozzie, for providing us with the hyena’s opinion,” Clyde said. Ozzie volunteered his opinion on boars as well, which Clyde chose to ignore. “However the Ark was opened, if it was, the question now is when we will be allowed to raise Lemuria.” “I think you’re forgetting,” J.J. said, “that the Ark isn’t complete. Seth hasn’t agreed to give you his blood.” Even Melody looked taken aback. The Commanders had all been assuming Seth would. Josephine O’Shea folded her hands on the tabletop. A bloody patch covered her right eye; she had taken a knife-slash to the face during the battle. “There is the Tortoise Clan – ” “Oh, bosh,” said Clyde. “I, for one, find it difficult to believe that such a clan escaped the destruction of Lemuria. I have never heard of the Tortoise Clan. Has anyone else?” “Yes,” said J.J., in an icy tone. “Yes,” said someone, in a thick-as-molasses Louisiana drawl. Every head at the table came around. Even McLain started, although he had already worked out the ruse on his own. 295 Ben Schofield, very much alive, lumbered into the room. His salt-and-pepper hair was as grizzled as the beard growing wild off his chin; looking especially delicate in his shadow, a young girl walked beside him, her dark hair swept up in a ponytail, exposing the graceful curve of her neck. Someone had dressed her in jeans and a plain white T-shirt. Her small hand was clasped tightly in Ben’s bear-like paw. McLain felt a twist under his heart. His aunt Ingrid leapt up, rushing forward to throw her arms around her niece; Caroline hugged her tightly, her dark eyes meeting McLain’s across the room. She smiled. McLain smiled back. The Commanders started to rise. Ben waved them back into their seats. He sat down at the head of the table, in the chair J.J. had vacated. Emery hopped up to give his chair to Caroline. Dre remained seated, laptop open on his knees, small hands fluttering up to swipe at his bangs. “Ben,” Melody Little managed to squeak. “Thank the stars! We thought – ” “You thought what I wanted you to think,” Ben drawled, “and for that, I am sorry. But we needed to know who the spy was, so Caroline here could come back to us. And we weren’t gonna find that out unless we had a prize big enough to flush ’em out of hiding.” “You are too big of a prize to pass up, Ben,” Josephine said, lightly. Ben smiled at her, creasing his cheeks. “Thank you for that, Josie. But I wasn’t talking about me. “The Tortoise Clan exists.” Ben pronounced this decisively, to murmurs of surprise from the Commanders. Burke pressed the tips of his fingers to the underside of his chin. David Burke and Ben Schofield were two men Will McLain respected deeply. They were very different, in some ways, but in one thing, they were the same. They always tried to do what was right. “I’ve met with them. For more years than anyone here can count, they’ve guarded a power that, as you all saw tonight, could destroy this planet just as completely as any nuclear bomb. But their time is up. Tortoises live long lives, but they don’t live forever. That’s what they told Abraham Bishop when he and his son happened on to them after years and years of searchin’ through old Mayan pyramids. They 296 had read in the stars that the time was right for the Black Swan to be born, so they told Elijah Bishop how to find the Ark and resurrect the werekin race, and ever since then they’ve been waitin’, for the power of the Totems to be safe in the hands of the werekin again. “I’m sorry for what happened here tonight.” Ben’s eyes, sunk deep into their wrinkled sockets, touched on Lydia Steward, who was dabbing at her eyes. “Any loss of life is to be mourned, but as I understand it, some very good lives were lost in this fight. And I’m afraid I had a hand in that. I asked the Tortoise Clan to give their weapon, the Source, to Ursula LeRoi.” Only J.J. and Xanthe did not react to this. McLain assumed that was because they were the only two to have seen it coming – Xanthe because he had arranged it, J.J. because he was J.J. Clyde Dowling jumped to his feet, shouting at Ben. Ozzie and Melody shouted across the table at Clyde. Josephine O’Shea waved her hands, urging everyone to calm down. Logue Ampon looked around with mild disgust and said nothing. Caroline’s big, dark eyes moved anxiously around the room, never lighting in one place for long. “Ladies and gentlemen, please.” Burke brought his palm down, flat, on the table. Silence fell, broken only by Clyde’s indignant snort. “Mr. Schofield, could you please explain why you would hand a weapon of this magnitude over to an enemy of the state?” “General, Ursula LeRoi is not an enemy of the state. Ursula LeRoi is an enemy to all humankind, and it’s time you understood it.” Ben displayed his right hand, branded with four numbers and a Greek letter. Burke sat back, mouth set in a white line. “I’ve been around this game a while,” Ben went on, his voice a soft rumble. “I was one of the first werekin born in captivity. I know what Project Ark’s backup plan was if it ever seemed the werekin posed a threat to humankind. Extermination.” Burke did not deny this. “You may disagree with my methods, General, and if so, I’m the one, the only one,” Ben glanced, almost imperceptibly, at McLain, “you need to hold accountable for that. But I thought it was time you saw werekin are not your enemies. With the power of the Totems, your own race will do a fine job of wiping one 297 another out without our help. All we want is the chance to protect you from a power humans were never meant to control. “When I founded the Resistance, my goal was to free my kindred from enslavement. Back then, I thought that meant raising Lemuria. But I’ve done some living since then, and I can’t say as that’s still what I believe. I think humans and werekin can share this planet without either race having to be enslaved or exterminated. He may have lost faith before the end, but when he was a young man, Elijah Bishop believed that humankind could learn something from the werekin about how to live in peace, like our clans did on Lemuria eons ago. So it seems to me we have a choice. We can fight a war, and whoever wins can raise Lemuria, or we can agree to leave Lemuria where she lies, and find a way to live without war.” Clyde started to speak, but Burke held up a hand. “And what of the Ark, Mr. Schofield? What of this weapon Ursula LeRoi brought here tonight? You must agree that is simply too much power to leave lying around.” Ben looked at Dre, who hopped to his feet. His right shoulder was bandaged, but that didn’t stop him from typing furiously on his keyboard. An image projected onto the wall from an overhead projector, and even McLain started. “Jensen?” “Captain. General Burke.” Kate Jensen saluted. She was outside; the desert sky spread out like a blue panel behind her, just beginning to darken to twilight, striped with red around the horizon. “We had some, uh, interesting visitors here this evening, sir. They brought us this.” The camera panned away from her. Inside a strand of razortopped chain link fence that seemed to stretch for miles around a desert compound, an obsidian cone was being guarded by two tanks and a dozen M.P.s. Burke grounded his teeth together. “What the hell is it, Lieutenant?” “They called it the Source, sir. You can see the sides are etched with Lemurian glyphs – ” the camera zoomed in; the obsidian stone was scored with archaic symbols, top to bottom “ – and we were told that if we translated those, we would have the ability to operate it. But they, uh, suggested we might want to be careful about doing that, after what happened in Fairfax tonight.” The camera panned back to Jensen. “All right there, Will?” 298 “For the most part,” McLain said. “I’m sure Captain McLain will brief you fully later, Lieutenant.” Burke sounded bemused. “When you say this thing is a ‘source,’ what does that mean?” “Not a source,” Dre chirped. “The Source. The source of werekin magic.” “And this is what the Tortoise Clan was guarding down there, in the Amazon?” “It is,” Ben said. “And you gave it to humans?” Clyde Dowling’s jowly cheeks actually jiggled with rage. “After everything they’ve done to us? Collared us – enslaved us – planned to exterminate us? See here, Ben, I was trained at West Point, and I’m telling you – ” “Ursula LeRoi is not humanity.” Caroline McLain’s voice was like a chime. It silenced the entire room. The Black Swan looked painfully small beside Ben, like when McLain used to pick her up and kiss her scraped knees on the playground – something she would have been mortified for him to try now that she was almost a teenager, as she liked to remind him. She glanced at him. McLain smiled encouragingly. “All I hear you talking about is how we’re enemies,” Caroline said. “I don’t see it that way. If humans are our enemies, why did the Totems choose to bless them all those eons ago? The Totems came to Earth because they were called from beyond the stars by shamans. Those shamans were human. The Totems blessed them, and after that, the children born to the shamans were not human. They were werekin, born with a human and an animal skin, able to inhabit either at will.” It was a story McLain could have quoted along with her. A story their aunt Ingrid had told them, over and over, since they were small. “With all due respect,” Josephine said, quite respectfully, “that was then, and this is now. The world has changed. Like Ben, I was born in captivity. A Gen-3. Ben formed the Resistance to fight Chimera. I saw the struggle of our kindred to live in the human world. I saw the persecution they would face if they were to reveal their skins. That is why we formed the Underground – ” 299 “ – with the help of my parents,” Caroline broke in, gently, “who were human. The world may have changed, Commander O’Shea, but it can’t have changed that much, since the Totems decided to bless my parents thirteen years ago, just like they did those original shamans.” There was a pause while that sank in. Wesley Townsend got to his feet. It looked almost as though he couldn’t help himself. “Your parents were human?” he said. “Both of them?” Caroline nodded, biting her lower lip as she glanced at McLain. “We have the blood tests to prove it,” he said. Dr. Townsend appeared thunderstruck. Ben Schofield looked coldly at him. “Everything you did for Chimera, Doctor, trying to force the birth of the Black Swan by manipulating the Ark, if you’d just bothered to listen to what Elijah Bishop had learned from the Tortoise Clan, you would have known your experiments were pointless. No black swan existed on Lemuria. Caroline is the first of her breed ever to be born. The Ark could not give you something it did not contain.” Right then, Wesley Townsend looked like he could have been knocked over with a feather. He sat down heavily. Burke was still grinding his teeth, a sure sign he was dying to light up one of his fat Cuban cigars. He pointed at the projection on the wall, freeze-framed on the obsidian cone. “You’re giving us this. Are you giving us the Ark, too?” “No.” Burke had asked the question of Ben, but it was Agathon who answered. His voice was so dry and crackling few of those in the room realized what it was at first, and looked around like they thought the ceiling was caving in; then Agathon stepped forward, tapered fingers folded in front of him. “Our ancestors sacrificed themselves to stop the power of the Totems from being used to destroy the Earth. It is a duty and a destiny that we, as their descendants, must accept. We give you the Source to show you that we have no interest in destroying you. The Ark and the Source are two halves of the same whole. The Ark is needed to raise Lemuria. The Source is needed to power what lies beneath it. For your own protection, the Ark will remain under the guardianship of the Alpha Clan, just as our father instructed. If your government 300 wishes to take it from us,” Agathon finished, quietly, “they are welcome to try.” “That still doesn’t answer what’s going to happen to us.” Melody Little’s long braid was coming unraveled; she twitched it impatiently behind her shoulder. “Are werekin to remain Underground, or will our existence be announced to the world? What’s to be done with the Partners?” Dre touched a button on his keyboard; the projection on the wall began to scroll through a list of names: Simmons & Blackwell Security; Cochran Jewelers (specializing in silver); Steward & Regent Law Firm; Lee MicroTek; Heilsdale Shipping & Trucking. The men and women seated along the wall shifted uncomfortably, looking from Melody to Burke. “And what about LeRoi? Will she be executed?” “Now see here, Melody,” Clyde snorted. “We haven’t agreed not to raise Lemuria. Some of us may have intermarried with humans, had human children, but some of us want to go home. This isn’t a decision you can just force on the werekin, you know!” “He’s right,” Josephine agreed, reluctantly. “We command the Resistance, but no one elected us to speak for the entirety of our kindred. We are not kings and queens.” “One of us is,” J.J. said, with a pointed look at Caroline. For the last few minutes he had been so uncharacteristically quiet McLain had forgotten he was in the room. “What I would like to know,” said Logue Ampon, the first time he had spoken, “is what the human governments will do if we choose to raise Lemuria.” His cat’s eyes were on Burke. The iron-haired general folded his hands on the table. McLain found that his heart was beating very hard, pulses seeming to drum against his bruises, like the breathless moments before a patrol erupted into a firefight. “I have been authorized to tell you that if the werekin choose to raise Lemuria, the United States government will consider that an act of war, and they will respond with all necessary might to suppress the threat of an alien invasion,” Burke said. The Commanders looked at one another, their worst fears confirmed, but Burke was not finished. “What I have not been authorized to tell you is that the men and women in my unit, who have spilled their blood alongside you and on your behalf, agreed with me an 301 hour ago that each and every one of us would refuse any order to fire upon the werekin.” Burke rose. “Commanders, I am not your enemy. Captain McLain and his men are not your enemies. But we alone cannot protect you. If you want my advice, here it is. The Underground is a network, one you know how to access. Use it. Send out word, gather every werekin on the planet here at Fort King. Warrior breeds or not, every one of you is powerful. “I understand you have a saying,” Burke said. “‘Blood calls to blood.’ I believe there’s a reason for that – a reason you can recognize one another on sight. You were meant to be united.” The general turned to Caroline then, and bowed. “Whatever you choose, Your Highness, if you stand together, no force on Earth will be able to defeat you.” *** When Seth woke up, alone, in Fort King’s infirmary, with only the vaguest memory of Lydia and Jack leading him in there to lie down on one of the cots, an image was branded behind his eyes, of a smooth square of plastic with a design drawn on the front – a Tarot card. The Hanged Man. My wife was Creole, Seth heard Ben Schofield say, in a dream that had not been a dream but a memory, from long ago. I remember her telling me the Hanged Man was a card about sacrifice. Surrendering your life for the good of all, like Osiris or Christ. There was another commonality to the story of Osiris and Christ, Seth thought, as he sat up. Resurrection. And just like that, without knowing how he knew, he knew what J.J. had done. From Fort King to the Royal Acres Cemetery was twenty miles. In his jaguar skin, running flat out, Seth could cover that distance in no time. In the west, the sun was sinking, a salmonpink sliver between bare trees; staying out of sight of the highway, Seth splashed through streams, jumped over rocks, a gold-andblack blur in the forests that ringed Fairfax. The cemetery gate was unlocked, but Seth leapt the fence, easily clearing the diamond-shaped spikes, and raced headlong toward the knot of people gathered around the bowl-shaped tree. 302 He recognized Cleo’s muscular frame, Emery’s big ears, Whitney’s sleek bob, Leigh’s auburn curls, Dre’s narrow shoulders. The shadows that had followed him through the forest coalesced around them, stretching their fingers toward the massive winged creature standing over the shrouded form laid out on top of J.J.’s empty grave. Membranous wings stirred the air around Agathon, causing the flames of the candles at his feet to dance. He was chanting, words in Lemurian that shook the ground like the beat of a thousand drums – words that spoke of darkness and rot, a single, simple refrain beating under it all. Return. Return. Return. Seth bounded toward him, skirting tombstones. He saw a blonde head come around, heard J.J. swear, softly. Then his twin was running toward him, and Seth realized, as J.J. gripped his arms, that he had returned to his human skin. “Seth, stop,” J.J. pleaded. “Stay back.” Just wait, he was saying, in Seth’s mind. Just wait. “J.J.” Seth choked on the words, his mouth drier than bone. “J.J., why?” “Because.” Sunlight burnished J.J.’s deeply shadowed eyes. His voice was a thin, ragged whisper. “He’s Doc.” Because sometimes, we cannot let go. Agathon raised a silver goblet. Even at a distance Seth could smell the blood inside of it. Flames crackled under the necromancer’s voice, and on a booming note – return – he spilled the blood onto the grave. There was an earthshaking crack; the bowl-shaped tree simply uprooted, toppling backwards with a mighty crash, as though a giant had reached down from the sky, grasped its branches, and drug it from the ground. Roots straggled out from its heart like petrified veins, colored meaty red by the damp Indiana clay. Inside its shroud, Marshall’s body twitched. Leigh screamed. J.J. turned, and as he did, the last ray of daylight sparked off something in his hand, something Seth, in his panic, had not noticed before. A bone-handled dagger. J.J. was holding a dagger, and now he was running away from Seth, hurtling headstones, running toward the body lying on top of the grave, his own grave, and it became clear to Seth, all at once, why J.J. had not told him what he planned to do. 303 To raise the dead, to return a soul to its body, you must call back the soul that has departed, and you cannot know where the soul has traveled. You can never be certain what will return. If it will be the soul as it was, or if it will be utterly unrecognizable. Just wait, J.J. had said. Wait and see if what had come back was Marshall, or something else. Because if it was something else, J.J. intended to kill it. Kill it, and bury Marshall’s body in his grave. What story would Operation Swan Song pass off about Marshall’s death? Would they say he had run away? Or, better yet, would J.J. and Xanthe employ some of Chimera’s tactics, enchant Whitney and Meredith into believing Marshall had never existed, as Lydia had been enchanted to believe she had caused J.J. to drown as an infant? Would they make Seth forget? Would Marshall Jason Townsend be erased from the world completely? With a snarl, Seth bounded after his twin. He caught up to him in two loping strides, slamming into him from behind and knocking him into the concrete angel. J.J. hissed as he hit the ground. Cleo shouted, but Seth ignored her, like he ignored J.J., who was looking up at him and begging him to stop, just stop, please wait. Marshall, or the thing that had been Marshall and might not still be, was struggling inside the thin gray shroud wound around him, head to toe. Seth knelt, grasped the edge of the cloth, and ripped it down the side with nails that had sharpened into claws. Cleo and Emery started forward. Agathon threw out a hand, warning them away. Dark hair appeared first. Then angular cheekbones. An offcenter nose. Full lips. Shoulders clad in white silk. Marshall had been washed and dressed in a white Healer’s robe embroidered with scarlet glyphs; the robe was open at the throat, revealing a chest unblemished by any wound, just a tiny, circular scar. “Marshall!” Seth gasped, the name a question as much as it was a cry. Blue eyes blinked at him. “Philadelphia?” His voice was weak and hoarse, but it was Marshall’s voice. Unable to speak, Seth nodded. Marshall pushed a hand through his hair, swiveling around to take in the scene. Agathon looming over them, clutching a goblet 304 half-full of blood. J.J. sprawled on the ground, dagger forgotten beside him, Cleo resting a hand on his arm. Whitney and Emery and Leigh and Dre clasping one another like a many-legged beast, crying and laughing at the same time. “All right,” Marshall said. “What’d I miss?” 305 Chapter Twenty-Five: Home “He’s leaving, Seth. Just get used to it,” Leigh said. Seth stopped tossing his miniature Nerf basketball at his sister’s ceiling, the more effectively to glower at her. Leigh didn’t notice. She was too busy glamifying herself for the briefing McLain had called, for some reason at Cleo’s rather than the fort. Teenagers only, no adults allowed. For the past hour, Seth had watched Leigh try on every outfit in her closet before finally raiding Lydia’s. Her bed looked like a Vogue magazine had exploded on it. Poe and Captain Hook were napping on a skirt by the footboard. “You don’t know he’s leaving,” Seth said. “He hasn’t started to pack.” Leigh fluffed her curls. “What does he have to do, roll up his sleeping bag and fold the tent?” Although he scowled, Seth feared she was right. Seth hadn’t seen his twin in days. J.J. haunted the house on Kings Lane like a ghost more than ever these days, evidence of his visitations found in an empty box of Pop-Tarts on the counter, a muddy paw print on the stoop. Since the night of LeRoi’s takedown, he had been closeted at Fort King with the Black Swan and her Commanders, plotting the werekin’s next move. Ursula LeRoi was in custody, but the future of the werekin race was still very much up in the air, as more and more of their kindred poured in to Fort King from the Underground, awaiting their queen’s decision. Would the werekin raise Lemuria, at the risk of going to war with humankind, or would they remain on Earth, try to find a new peace? Ben was advising the latter. But, in the end, like J.J., he would support whatever the Black Swan decided. When Ben Schofield had walked through the Stewards’ front door five days ago, Seth had wanted to pummel him for letting them believe he was dead, but he had been too relieved to have his Papa Bear back, safe and sound. And really, without the ruse that had finally drawn LeRoi and her spy out, Chimera Enterprises would still be operating in the shadows, Caroline McLain still in hiding. 306 Seth had been busy himself this past week. Coach had volunteered the Knights to help the National Guard clear away the hundreds of trees that had smashed houses and blocked roads. The Storm of the Century, that was what the media was calling the bizarre weather event that had descended on Fairfax, leaving the surrounding counties unscathed – which just went to show, Seth had told Agathon, that conspiracy theorists weren’t always whack-jobs. Sometimes the aliens were behind things. School had been closed for days. The Fairfax High gym would have to be entirely rebuilt; Seth and J.J.’s magical Totem-bonding had reduced it to a pile of Pick-Up-Sticks. Thousands were still without power, property losses estimated in the millions. To make matters worse, the levees on the Ohio River had broken, flooding most of downtown. If Seth had ever needed proof that human civilization could not withstand the power of the Totems, he had it in the destruction caused by a single, short-lived assault. Marshall had not been around for the cleanup. He had been with his father, volunteering at Fairfax Memorial as patients were transferred in from other storm-damaged hospitals. The Audi was gone when Seth woke up in the mornings, still gone when he collapsed into bed at night, exhausted from chopping limbs and hauling branches. Seth rolled onto his side, throwing the ball into the hallway for Captain Hook to fetch. “Seth, I’m telling you,” Leigh insisted. “If they vote to raise Lemuria, J.J. will be the first one onboard the spaceship. If not, he’ll be hopping the first Resistance train out of Fairfax. You might as well embrace the pain, big brother, and move – ” “What pain are we embracing?” Leigh jumped, squealing as she streaked kohl eyeliner across her cheekbone. J.J. had appeared soundlessly in the doorway – stealth, it was a cat thing, but Seth, according to Leigh, had the decency not to scare the living daylights out of people just for the fun of it. “Jeremy Jonathan! You could at least have the courtesy of warning a girl before you sneak up on her,” she snipped. “And is that what you’re wearing?” J.J. looked down at his black T-shirt and ripped jeans. “I always wear this.” 307 “That’s not true,” Seth disagreed. “Sometimes you wear camouflage.” J.J.’s sigh was somewhat wistful. Leigh glared at them both and stomped into her bathroom to wipe off the eyeliner smear. Seth sat up. His own T-shirt was wrinkled from lying down. “Are you coming to Cleo’s with us?” “I’m gonna ride with Quinn,” J.J. said. “But since we’re actually home at the same time, I wanted to give this back to you.” He held out Seth’s katana, off his fingertips, like the warrior he was. Seth shook his head. “You keep it,” he said. “I don’t want it anymore.” J.J.’s nod said he got it. He did, too, more than even Seth did. To Seth, giving away the sword was letting go of his attachment to Werner Regent. Not his memories of him; those would always be there, in the lessons Regent had taught him – lessons that had saved Seth’s life more than once. It was the anguish of betrayal attached to those memories, and the wishing for Regent to be a better man than he ever had been, Seth was letting go of. The man Regent was, for good or for ill, he would hold onto. He didn’t need a sword for that. To J.J., the laying down of a sword was a symbolic act. The first step on the path of a life without war. And yet, “Thanks,” was all he said, slinging the sheathed katana across his back. “And by the way, you’re wanted downstairs.” *** Seth was half-hoping it would be Marshall waiting at the bottom of the stairs, there to surprise him with a ride to the briefing, but it was not. “Hi, Jack,” he said, doing his best to hide his disappointment. Leigh froze on the stair behind him. “What are you doing here?” she demanded, caustically. “Adleigh Jean,” Lydia sighed from the living room, but there wasn’t much traction to the rebuke. She was sitting on the couch in jeans and a white blouse, gripping a goblet of merlot tight enough to shatter the delicate stem. “Seth, honey, come in here so we can – Adleigh! What are you wearing?” 308 “What?” Leigh looked down innocently at the little red dress she had snagged from her mother’s closet. The neckline was, shall we say, plunging. “You are not wearing that out of this house,” Lydia said. Leigh fired up instantly. “Why not? You wear it out of the house.” “And I am not sixteen years old,” Lydia said. “Go upstairs and change.” “Mom!” “Leigh.” Jack spoke quietly. “Do as your mother says.” Seth was sure Leigh was going to tell him off. After a moment, though, she just sent her eyes skyward, muttered, “Whatever,” and marched back upstairs. Lydia and Jack exchanged a quick, bemused look. The wine had stained Lydia’s lips dark red; it made her look pale. Seth felt his stomach begin to churn as Jack steered him down the hall, where he took up residence next to his mother. Jack perched on the arm of his old recliner, tie loosened. “This is about Dr. Townsend, isn’t it?” Seth said. Lydia drew back the hand she had placed over his. “How did you – ” “Because he’s not an idiot, Lydia.” Jack sounded weary. His briefcase was on the floor, beside his jacket, suggesting he had come here straight from the office. “Seth, we were holding off on telling you this, because of everything that’s happened this past week, but school will be starting again Monday, so you need to know. Wesley has forbidden Marshall to see you. Even as friends.” As soon as he said it, Seth felt like the World’s Most Clueless Boyfriend. Five days without Marshall stopping by. Five days without an invitation to come over to his place. Five days without a proper phone call, just text messages to say good night and good morning. There was a phrase for that. It was called being blown off. “When did this edict come down?” Seth asked. “After your sectionals game against Sacred Heart,” Jack said. So that was what the drama in Coach’s office had been about, Seth thought. “I’ve spoken to Marshall. He’s very upset.” Marshall had called Jack, but not Seth? How did that work? Didn’t Seth even rate being officially dumped? He could not 309 believe this. He could not believe he had lost Marshall, as completely as anyone could be lost, and now he was losing him again, over his father. When Marshall knew what his father was. What he had done. The anger siphoned off almost as swiftly as it had bubbled up. Maybe this was how it was meant to be, Seth thought, dully. Maybe this was the break that needed to happen for him to return to Lemuria with his kindred. Maybe the Totems were using Dr. Townsend to take away his primary reason for staying in Fairfax, playing ball, graduating high school, trying to lead a normal human life. Maybe this was Fate’s way of telling him Marshall would be safer, happier, without him. At the end of the day, Marshall was alive. Whether he loved Seth or didn’t love Seth, whether Seth was with him or far away, Marshall was alive. And with that thought, Seth found his stillness again. He stood up. “We better get going. McLain wanted everybody there by seven. Mom, would it be okay if we took the bike?” Lydia looked startled. “I suppose, honey, but – don’t you think we should talk this out? We could go over there, see if Wesley would listen to reason…” Jack coughed once. Let it go, he seemed to be saying. Lydia pursed her lips, none too pleased, but said nothing as Jack walked over to Seth, giving his shoulder a quick squeeze. “You kids go on,” he said, kindly. “Have a good time.” *** A battered Jeep and a clunker van were parked next to the woodpile beside Cleo’s garage. As Seth opened the front door for Leigh, now jean-clad, Cleo looked up from sticking cans of soda into an ice-filled cooler by the sink. She was wearing black jeans and a white T-shirt. “Well, well, well,” she said. “Look what the cat dragged in.” “Where is everybody?” asked Leigh, meaning McLain. “Out back. Angelo wanted to cook out.” Cleo handed her a plate of chocolate chip cookies and nodded at the cooler. “Seth, be a sweetheart and carry that for me, will you?” 310 The scene on the back porch more resembled a party than a briefing – the werekin’s going away party, Seth assumed. Muse was playing on the stereo, which was plugged in beside a pine picnic table laden with plastic cups, paper plates, and bags of corn chips. Seth placed the cooler at the far end and popped the tab on a Mountain Dew, waving to Emery and Whitney, who were canoodling in a whicker loveseat. It was a gorgeous evening, promising spring just around the corner. A warm breeze stirred smoke from the grill; airbrushed clouds streaked the sky in reds and purples, lending a watercolor quality to the vast lawn and sentinel trees. Haven kids were spread across the lawn – swaying to the beat, tossing a Frisbee, just lounging on striped blankets. Zoe Campbell was lying with her head on Serena Jensen’s knee, having her sleek dark hair braided into dozens of tiny braids. Ozzie Harris was talking animatedly with Dre Alfaro, his distinctive high-pitched laugh carrying easily over the other conversations. They both looked up as Leigh sat down beside them. Seth slunk over to the grill. “A bull cooking hamburgers,” he said. “You know, I think I saw a Far Side T-shirt about this once.” Angelo Alfaro flashed him a gap-toothed grin. “Dude, you are one sick pussycat. These,” he flipped one of the burgers on the charcoal grill, “are soy burgers.” Taking the Coke Seth held out to him, Alfaro lowered his massive self into his lawn chair with a sigh. The apron he was wearing over his Chicago Bulls jersey said Shiitake Happens. “Why isn’t Doc with you?” Seth shrugged. “He’s at the hospital, I guess.” “You guess?” Cleo hopped up on the rail beside Seth, studying his eyes. “You don’t know?” Before Seth could answer her, an earsplitting bellow nearly caused him to skin. “Angelo, good grief,” Leigh complained, scowling at the soda she had just splashed all over her shirt. Alfaro smirked. “Now that I have your attention,” he said, “my man here wants to say something.” Seth turned as Alfaro gestured. Quinn O’Shea and J.J. were walking across the lawn together, from the direction of the woods. No denying they made a striking pair, Quinn with her copper hair blowing across her freckled cheeks, J.J. with his round golden eyes 311 and slim warrior’s build. Cleo looked down at her hands, folded tightly in her lap. Marching (there was no other word for it) behind them were Will McLain and a young woman Seth didn’t know, also dressed in desert fatigues, dark hair swinging in a high ponytail tucked through the back of her duty cap. JENSEN was stitched onto her jacket. She hung back with Quinn as McLain and J.J. stopped at the foot of the steps. Seth felt like he was frozen in place. Now that it came down to it, now that he had to choose, he realized the choice had already been made, the day he had knelt at J.J.’s grave and promised to bring him home. Wherever J.J. went, Seth would go, too. At a nod from McLain, J.J. opened his mouth. Deep in the forest cicadas were singing; the trees were dark giants standing sentry around the lodge-like house, the sky so brilliantly lit the clouds appeared to be on fire. A portentous backdrop for a battlefield speech. “We’re staying,” J.J. said. Seth blinked. It was not at all what he had been prepared for. From the looks on everyone else’s faces – Emery’s nose was actually wiggling – it hadn’t been what they had expected, either. “You mean,” Dre said, “we’re not raising Lemuria?” “Not at the moment,” J.J. said, expressionless. “And the Ark?” Emery had risen from the loveseat. “Did the government agree that the Gen-0s can remain its guardians?” “Well, it’s not complete,” J.J. glanced at Seth, “so for now, it and the Gen-0s are staying here, and the Source will stay at Roswell, under guard.” McLain stepped forward as J.J. stepped back. Murmurs were sweeping the lawn. “I asked General Burke’s permission to share this information with all of you,” McLain said over them. “The Partners have been granted a general amnesty, but we’ll keep an eye on them, to be sure they don’t try to pick up where LeRoi left off. Besides that, we’ve got a lot of werekin housed at Fort King right now waiting to be integrated into the human world, so you can expect to have quite a few new classmates at Fairfax High in the coming weeks, and new neighbors in Haven Heights. The Commanders agreed that the time is not right to announce the existence of werekin to the wider world. 312 “In the meantime, the Resistance has been dissolved – ” there were a few murmurs of astonishment at that “ – and a new body has been formed. We’re calling it the Alliance. It will be the first black ops unit to ever officially incorporate both werekin and human soldiers. Some will remain in Fairfax, to guard the Ark. Some will accompany Jensen to Roswell, to guard the Source.” “What about you?” Seth was looking, not at McLain, but at J.J. J.J.’s golden eyes jumped from him to Cleo. After a beat, he said, “I’m staying here.” Someone let out a jubilant squeal. The next second, Leigh had shoved past McLain, seizing J.J. in a hug so tight he reeled backwards, steadying himself with an effort. “Hey,” he gasped. “You’re staying! Oh, J.J., this will be so fun!” Tipping back on her heels, Leigh beamed up at him. “We’ll fix you up your own room. You can have mine, across the hall from Seth, and I’ll take Daddy’s old office on the second floor – ” “Leigh, I like the basement,” J.J. said. “No one bugs me there.” “Well, we’ll see,” Leigh said, with the air of someone who knows she has already won. J.J. looked to Seth for help, but Seth just grinned. You’re on your own, big brother. He turned, to beam at Cleo, only to find that she had risen and was walking back into the house. Setting his soda down, Seth chased after her. He caught up to her in the kitchen. “Cleo! Cleo, what’s…what’s wrong…” The words trailed off. Because Seth already knew. He knew before Cleo turned to face him, outlined in fire by the setting sun. Her smile was wan. “You’re leaving,” Seth said. “You’re going with Jensen.” “I was assigned,” Cleo said. “So ask them to reassign you,” Seth said. Cleo didn’t answer. Seth took a step closer to her. “Cleo, you can’t leave, just because…” Just because J.J. has a crush on someone else, he wanted to say, his eyes straying out the window, to Quinn and J.J., reclining together on a blanket under a cherry tree. Cleo pushed off the counter. “Come on, sweetheart,” she said. “Let’s go for a drive.” *** 313 Twilight bled across the barren fields, slowly deepening to full night. Damage from the storm was still visible – a barbed wire fence rolled up like a metal tumbleweed, a red combine upside down on top of an old barn. Cleo cranked down the Ford’s windows and hung her hand out the window, fingers curved like she was hoping to catch fireflies. “I’m not leaving because of J.J.,” she said. Seth snorted. “Right. And I’m a weregiraffe.” Cleo laughed, melting the purple in her eyes into blue, like paint spilled onto canvas. “Okay, I am leaving because of J.J., but not how you’re thinking. He has to stay here, to guard the Ark, to help Ben solidify the Alliance, and to be honest, to protect you. Even in custody LeRoi could still be dangerous. Regent is still out there, and Gideon, and no matter how closely Burke monitors the Partners, there is no guarantee they won’t find a way to continue LeRoi’s work without us knowing. J.J. needs someone he trusts to go to Roswell and help guard the Source. That’s killing him, because he wants to do both – protect the Ark, and protect the Source. If it was up to J.J., he would take all the risks himself. But he can’t. And since he can’t, I told him I would go to New Mexico, do what needs to be done.” Seth slouched down in his seat. He hated that Cleo’s explanation was too noble for him to argue with. “What did he say, when you volunteered?” “He said there was no one he trusted more to see it through.” For J.J., that was saying he loved you. Cleo, who understood J.J. as well as Seth did, had to know that. She had turned off the highway, onto the long drive that circled up to Fort King. Before they reached the gate, she put the truck in park. Cutting the engine, she gazed up the hill at the sprawling structure, liquid-black in the dying light. Seth looked at it, too. He had a feeling he knew why she had brought him here. “Cleo, you can’t leave without telling J.J. how you feel,” he said. “He deserves to hear you say it.” “How I feel?” The words spooled out on a bitter thread. Suddenly, Cleo had unsnapped Seth’s seatbelt and fisted her hands in his shirt, hauling him in until they were nose to nose. 314 “How I feel, Seth Michael, is like someone laid my heart out on a chopping block and cleaved it, right down the center. J.J. has half. He used to have it all, but I never knew he wanted it, until after I met you. And now you, you’ve got the other half. I know you don’t want it, I know you’ll never want it, or me, but it’s yours anyway, and it will be forever because I don’t know how to take it back from you, so I can give it to someone else.” There was no ice left in Cleo’s eyes. It was all fire. No one had ever told Seth they loved him in quite those terms. No one had ever said he had split their heart in two. He thought Cleo would kiss him – they were close enough to kiss – and he didn’t know what to do if she did, how to push her away without breaking that piece of her heart she had given him; but she pushed him away, roughly, and stared out the windshield, fists clenched like she wanted to beat them against the wheel. Seth struggled for words. How did you respond to a declaration like that: I love you, and it’s breaking me in half? “Cleo.” He was whispering. “I never meant to – if I did something, to make you feel like that about me, if I led you on, I’m sorry.” “Seth.” Cleo sighed. “You didn’t have to do anything to make me love you. Neither did J.J. You both just are. Sometimes I think you’re the ones who were split in two. One skin, two bodies. Sometimes I think it would have been impossible for me to love him as much as I do and not fall in love with you, too.” Sliding across the seat, Seth cupped Cleo’s chin in his hand, forcing her to look at him. “Is that why you’re leaving? So you don’t have to be around me?” “Sweetheart, don’t think that. Please don’t think that.” Cleo rested her forehead against Seth’s. Her lashes were long enough to brush his. “I told you. I don’t want to go. I don’t want to leave either of you. I’m leaving because this needs to be done. As soon as I can, I’ll come back.” “I’ll miss you,” Seth said, softly. Cleo did kiss him then, tenderly, on the lips. “I’ll miss you, too,” she said. Seth folded her up in a hug. Over the top of her head, he looked up at the hill, at the fort. He was thinking of J.J., fighting a war at seventeen; of Cleo, marching off to protect a power source that 315 could level the planet; of Marshall, willing to sacrifice his life to free their kindred. What was Seth doing? Nothing. Hiding. Like he had hidden his entire life. It didn’t matter whether anyone else saw that as selfish or cowardly. Seth did. Your blood, he thought. Your choice. Sitting back from him, Cleo put the truck in reverse. “Go on,” she said, motioning for Seth to get out. As though she knew what he was thinking. As Seth supposed she did. It was why she had brought him here, where Seth hadn’t even realized he needed to go. Because that was how well Cleo knew him, too. *** Among the military vehicles and battered Resistance jalopies parked around the fountain, the aquamarine convertible was like a pearl in a bed of sand. Seth trailed his fingers along the hood and called, without turning, “How much horsepower does she pack?” The boy standing in the shadows stepped forward. The moon that a week ago had ridden like a chariot wheel above the swamped cemetery had waned to a pale sickle; it lengthened his shadow, making him longer and leaner even than he was. “You tell me, Philadelphia,” Marshall said. “You’re the car thief. I never cared about engines.” “Indiana, do you know what this is? It’s a Lotus Elise. You cannot own a car like this and not care about engines. Now, listen up,” Seth said. “She has two-hundred-and-eighty horsepower, rear wheel drive, and a one-point-eight-liter engine – in short, my friend, a beauty. An absolute beauty.” To prove his point, Seth kissed the paintjob. Marshall laughed. “What happened to the Audi?” “The Audi,” Marshall pitched the letterman’s jacket that had been hooked over his index finger into the convertible’s backseat, “was damaged in the storm. My father does not own things that are damaged.” His arms snaked around Seth from behind. Seth tensed; Marshall noticed. “What’s wrong?” he asked, softly. What was wrong? Seth stared at Marshall’s reflection in the dark-tinted window. The black sweater he was wearing did 316 wonders for his baby blues, the honey tone of his skin. “What’s wrong,” he said, “is that you haven’t called me in a week.” “You haven’t called me either, you know.” Completely unruffled, Marshall sat down on the hood. He looked tired tonight, but not brooding or regretful. And not like the boy Seth had met in the Stewards’ kitchen on New Year’s Eve, either, settled so awkwardly inside his skin. This Marshall wore his skin like it belonged to him. “I came by your house earlier. Your mom said I missed you and Leigh by about five minutes.” Seth kicked at the tire, half-wanting to believe this, half-afraid to. “Why didn’t you come to Cleo’s, then?” he asked, grumpily. “I was on my way. I just stopped by here to check on Connie.” Connor Burke. Another casualty of LeRoi’s obsession. Seth bit his lip. “How is he?” “It’s hard to say. Gideon saved his life by pouring that Healing potion down him at the last, but he lost a lot of blood, and he has a lot of nerve and tissue damage around the spine. Aphrodisia is hopeful he’ll walk again, but it’s going to take time. He probably won’t ever play basketball again.” Seth felt sick. He had tried to visit Connor a few times in the infirmary, but had always been turned away, by Aphrodisia. She had said Connor needed his rest. Now Seth wondered if he just didn’t want visitors. “I guess J.J. was wrong about him,” he said. “I guess so,” Marshall said, softly. Seth sat down on the hood as well. Breakups were not an area of expertise for him, but he didn’t think this was how it went when someone was dumping you. “I’m sorry I haven’t called you,” he said, a little stiffly. “I wasn’t mad,” Marshall said. “We’ve both been busy.” He smiled at him. Now Seth wanted Marshall to reach for him, and he didn’t; he fiddled with his keychain – a basketball charm, #11, his number, painted on it in gold glitter pen. A gift from Whitney for his sixteenth birthday. Seth knew that from his little trip down Marshall’s memory lane. “Your parents told you my father won’t let me see you anymore, didn’t they?” Seth nodded. He was finding it easier to watch the water splash in the fountain, suddenly, than to look Marshall in the eye. “I wanted to tell you,” Marshall said. “I should have told you. But I thought you might be leaving, depending on what the Black 317 Swan decided, and I wanted to give you some space to sort all of that out.” Seth leaned back on his elbows. “Indiana, has anyone ever told you that in the category of awesome boyfriends, you take the cake?” “You’re not so bad yourself, Philadelphia.” Marshall dropped the car keys into his pocket. “So we’re okay?” Other than the fact that they weren’t allowed to see each other, Seth supposed they were fabulous. “I’m not leaving,” he said. “I might be.” Seth sat up fast. “What?” “Not leaving, leaving,” Marshall said, quickly. “Just not living next door anymore. I was late for the briefing tonight because I was talking to my father. I told him I wasn’t going to stop seeing you, and when he told me I didn’t have a choice, I told him I was going to live my own life now, even if that meant moving out. I am eighteen. And then it just sort of…came out, that I knew what I was. What he had made me.” Marshall kicked a heel against the fender. Seth was glad he was sitting down. “What did he say?” he whispered. “He said I’ve always been a disappointment. I decided to take that as meaning his experiment had failed, because I didn’t share his ability to see werekin, and that was supposedly the whole point of cloning himself.” “But you do,” Seth said, softly, remembering how he had seen himself through Marshall’s eyes – like the statue the Alpha Clan had made of the Black Swan, human and animal skin elegantly fused. “Why didn’t you tell him the truth?” Marshall leaned back on the hood next to Seth. Clouds scudded across the moon, playing light and shadow across his angular face. “When she was little, Whitney started pointing out the people with the pretty colors. She doesn’t remember it this way – she thinks our father just took her for a CAT scan – but he put her in the hospital for a week to run tests. Spinal taps. MRIs. X-rays. She was three years old. The tests were inconclusive, so when she came home, I told her not to mention the colors anymore. I didn’t want her to end up lobotomized like Mom.” Marshall’s tone was bitter. “Your mom can see werekin, too?” 318 “She used to. I’m pretty sure that’s why my father married her. She used to paint them. The people with the colors.” Seth mentally took back every snide thought he had ever had about Meredith Townsend. “Where are you going to go?” he asked. “Dunno.” Marshall didn’t sound too concerned about it. “Chaz has a couch, doesn’t he?” “I think we can do you one better than that, Indiana,” Seth said, thinking of the loft above Jack’s bachelor pad living room. He stood up. There was something he needed to do. Something he had already put off for far too long. “Marshall, if I needed to go somewhere, would you come with me?” Marshall did not hesitate. “Anywhere,” he said. The front door opened without Seth needing to touch the keypad. No guards waited inside. Silently, Seth and Marshall slipped through the maze of corridors. It was almost like a path had been cleared for them – they encountered no one on their way to the elevator, which was waiting on them. On the lower level, the main chamber was deserted. Seth led Marshall into the warren of tunnels branching off from Dr. Bishop’s lab. The air was close and damp. Marshall was soon shivering. “You’re not leading me off down here to axe-murder me, are you?” he whispered. “Oh come on,” Seth whispered back. “If I wanted to kill you, I wouldn’t need an axe. I’d just bite through your skull.” “That’s very comforting, Philadelphia, thank you.” Seth grinned. Although he had been there only once, he found his way to the round door without a single wrong turn. Silver chains crisscrossed it, just as he remembered. He studied the glyphs burned into them, then lifted his hands, palms outward as he had seen Agathon do, and spoke a word in Lemurian. With a metallic clang, the chains slithered into the walls. Pulsing light swept over them as they stepped into the Ark’s chamber. Marshall, who had never seen the Ark, braced his elbows on the railing, gaping down at the crystal web. He didn’t ask what Seth was doing, didn’t suggest that he stop; he merely watched, entranced, as Seth spoke another word and the orb, like a pebble 319 bobbing to the surface of a lake, rose up through the web, and floated directly into his grasp. Seth understood that his kindred’s day of reckoning had not yet come. He didn’t know if it would come during his lifetime; there were some things no one could predict. The chain of events that had led Seth to Fairfax, for one – the grand cosmic string that had somehow spun out from Naomi’s dying words, leading him here, to his mother, to his sister, to his twin, to Marshall, and to the blood of the werekin ancestors. That was life – wonderfully uncertain. That was why the Totems had left a means for the werekin to escape this planet, if it ever came to that. That was why Seth had chosen to give his blood to the Ark. Seth was a rare breed. There was no guarantee another werejaguar would ever be born. “Hold out your hands,” he said. Marshall extended his hands. Seth laid the Ark in them. The light flared brighter, showing the bones in Marshall’s fingers like the filament in a light bulb. “I can feel it,” he whispered. “Seth, I can feel them.” Seth’s eyes came up to his. “Marshall, where did you go?” There was a catch in Marshall’s breathing. Seth vowed he would not ask again; if Marshall chose not to answer, it was a subject he would seal up forever between them. But Marshall said, “Nowhere.” “You mean – ” Seth had to swallow; his throat was dry. “You mean you don’t remember?” “No. I mean I went nowhere.” Marshall looked down into the orb. A crease appeared across his brow. “I didn’t see a white light. My life didn’t flash before my eyes. There was pain, but it was quick and then it was gone, and I could feel my body shutting down, but that was numbness, not pain. Everything went dark, slowly, like in a theater when they turn the lights down. For a while I could see shapes and hear noises, distantly, but then that went away too, and there was nothing. Less than nothing, really. I didn’t know I was nothing. I didn’t know I was, or ever had been. And then I was again. I was me. And it was – scary, and it was wonderful.” Scary and wonderful. Seth thought he could understand that, in a way. “Was it bad, for there to be nothing?” 320 “No. If that’s what it is, after I’m done here, as long as I live well, I won’t mind being nothing, after.” Marshall looked up at Seth. “What are we doing here, exactly?” “Just this,” Seth said. Placing the heel of his left hand on the orb, he let his claws slide out, until they pricked the center of his palm. A bead of blood tracked down his skin; when it touched the surface of the orb, the power inside awoke, like the beat of a thousand tiny hearts – like the flutter of a million tiny wings: a universe inside itself. Seth closed his eyes and spoke a word in Lemurian. He felt the sear of a sharp, sudden pain in his heart, over almost before it began. Like dying, or being born. Behind his eyelids he saw a jungle, trees taller than any trees on Earth, and a beach of sparkling white sand ringed by an ocean of the deepest blue. They were all there, his kindred –Naomi, and Thomas, and thousands upon thousands of those who had come before, and whose names Seth did not know. For an instant, he was there with them. When he opened his eyes, he was looking into Marshall’s face. It was then that Seth knew it did not matter whether Lemuria was ever raised from the sea. He was already home. 321 Epilogue The dungeon of Fort King was deep belowground. Deeper even than the lair of the Alpha Clan. Deeper than the chamber that housed the Ark. When the elevator doors opened with a pneumatic hiss, it was Will McLain who met J.J., though Ben Schofield was not far behind. J.J. nodded to them both. Midnight had come and gone; J.J. was tired, not from the party so much, but from everything that had come before. It showed in the slight quiver of the hand that brushed back his golden hair, the shadows under his big, round eyes. “Are we ready?” he asked. Ben hesitated, scratching at his freshly-trimmed beard. Safely back from the Amazon, he was wearing his ubiquitous XXXL flannel and steel-toed boots, and smelled vaguely of honey, as was fitting for a bear. Ben had not been sure about this from the start. The Commanders’ vote to spare Ursula LeRoi had been close, and Ben had had to exert a lot of influence to turn things their way. But, after a moment, he stepped back, and J.J. stepped off the elevator. Recessed lights cast an amber glow onto the stone floor. Condensation beaded on the corridor’s obsidian walls; J.J.’s breath frosted before him. If Dante was right, he thought, and hell was cold, this was as close to hell as you could get on Earth. McLain slid a pair of knit gloves over his hands. They were olive-green, like his fatigues. The pane of tempered glass at the end of the corridor showed their reflections drawing nearer, J.J. flanked by the bulkier Ben and the taller, sparer McLain. The woman on the other side turned, as though she had sensed their approach. In all his years of captivity, J.J. had only ever seen Ursula LeRoi wear a tailored black suit and a white lab coat. The washedout gray jumpsuit showed how slender she really was. Her mane of hair had been pulled back, not in its usual braid but in a thick bun, giving full play to her sculpted features. Her beauty was as sharp and deadly as fractured glass. “Captain,” LeRoi said, smoothly. “Your sister is glad to be back with you, I trust?” 322 Inside their gloves, McLain’s fingers flexed. J.J. could appreciate how badly he wanted to wrap them around LeRoi’s throat. “The Black Swan sends her regards,” he said, drolly. LeRoi’s smile did not reach her cold gray eyes. Her cell was sparse – steel cot, toilet, sink. A book rested upside down on her mattress. She saw J.J. take this all in, and smiled as she approached the glass. “Come to carry out your mother’s sentence, my pet?” When J.J. didn’t answer, McLain said, “The Commanders voted to spare you.” The words seemed to dry up in his mouth; his throat worked as he said them. LeRoi’s eyes flickered, or perhaps that was only a trick of the lights, which tended to sputter this far belowground. “And your government agreed to that?” “On the caveat that you never see the light of day again,” McLain said, grimly. “How quickly you turn on your allies, Captain. Project Ark was your government’s doing as much as mine. Do you think I could have accomplished half of what I accomplished without their backing? Yet now David Burke is happy to pretend I acted alone.” LeRoi turned from McLain, laying a palm, lightly, on the glass J.J. could see himself reflected in. It was almost as though nothing at all separated them, as though the wall of impenetrable glass was as meaningless as air. “Take note of this, my pet.” LeRoi’s voice was soft, and deadly. “They will do to you what they have done to me, if it suits their purposes. You cannot trust them, Jeremy. Perhaps the captain here, because he has a vested interest in protecting your race, but you understand how the chain of command works. Will McLain has orders he will have to carry out.” “I know you’re not suggesting we should trust you,” Ben said. LeRoi’s shoulders lifted in a careless shrug. “I never lied to you, Benjamin. My intention has ever been to raise Lemuria, and to permit every werekin loyal to me to live there, in peace.” “Maybe you should have thought about whether we wanted to be ‘permitted’ to live as slaves,” Ben growled. “Then why spare me, if you hate me so much?” LeRoi actually sounded wounded. She was unrivaled at games like this. Marshall had called J.J. a chess master, and he was not wrong. It just wasn’t 323 Xanthe who had taught J.J. to think one move ahead of his opponents. “Did you intercede for me, Captain?” McLain laughed. “Lady, if it was up to me, the only hole you’d be dropped into would be your own grave.” “Then it was you, Jeremy.” LeRoi’s voice softened again. “It was, I can see it in your eyes. You may hate me, oh yes, my pet, but you see further than they see. You know one day you will need me.” Her smile stretched up the corners of her lips. The wrinkles around her mouth were very fine. “When the Alliance fails, when everyone else betrays you, you will need me, and I will be here for you, as I always have.” She stroked the glass with the tips of her fingers, like she was stroking J.J.’s skin. Placing one foot behind the other, J.J. took a single, deliberate step back. “Good,” he said, flatly. “Then if I ever need you, I’ll know where to find you.” The smile curdled on LeRoi’s lips. J.J. turned to go. He heard LeRoi slap the glass, but he kept walking, even as her gaze bored into him from behind, even when her voice echoed after him, stripped of its oily timber, rotten with fury. “I know you, Jeremy Jonathan! I know the future you have seen.” Her voice dropped to a whisper, standing up the hairs on J.J.’s arms. “This is how it ends.” The elevator doors opened. Only then did J.J. turn, meeting LeRoi’s wild gaze down the length of the corridor. “There’s something you never understood about the future, Mother,” he said. “It can be changed.” 324 Acknowledgements Many heartfelt thanks to my big sister, my eternal cheerleader; to L.J., for insightful criticism, and copious praise; to the readers at FictionPress.com who took the time to review a much earlier draft of this book – I hope you like the changes; and to you, reader, for taking a chance on my books. To the friends, new and old, physical and virtual, who pull me out of my own head and make the lonely life of a writer a little less so: Even if I could do it without you, I wouldn’t want to. And, of course, to my parents. Mom, Dad, with all of my heart, thank you for telling me to always be myself, and for being only partially freaked out when I did. 325 About the Author Jesse Daro spends most of her time writing. Science fiction, fantasy, and horror are her favorite genres. She has a Ph.D. in English and teaches literature and writing in the Midwest. 326