Allie's War Season Three (184 page)

Read Allie's War Season Three Online

Authors: JC Andrijeski

BOOK: Allie's War Season Three
12.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Which, really, should have been a major clue that they probably should have paid more attention to the threat in general, rather than cracking jokes about which was more likely to sink into the ocean first...New York or Los Angeles.

Revik glanced at Jon, but he still couldn't tell much from the other man's expression.

Well, that wasn’t entirely true. He’d never seen Jon look so completely lost. Well, not since they’d been in that cell in the Caucasus Mountains with Cass.

“Snap out of it,” Revik growled. “Now, Jon. Or I really will kick the shit out of you.”

“Go ahead,” Jon said.

Revik felt a darker rage build abruptly behind his eyes.

“I mean it,” Revik said. “Keep your head on straight. We’re all right.”

Jon looked at him, his hazel eyes dense, but somehow clearer after Revik’s words. “You’re going to start that shit again, Revik?” Jon said coldly. “We’re not all right. Hate to break it to you, but we weren’t then, either. Cass certainly wasn’t.”

Realizing what Jon meant, Revik only frowned harder. “Have a pity party on your own time,” he growled. “...Commander. Or I’ll leave you behind. How about that?”

Jon didn’t answer.

When Revik glanced over at Maygar, he saw him glaring at Jon, too, as if restraining himself from saying what he wanted to say.

The ground under them shook again, harder that time.

“Fuck,” Jon said, staring down at the ground. Even so, something in the shaking that time seemed to snap him out, more than Revik’s words had managed to do. His hazel eyes widened when he met his gaze.

“That wasn’t a bomb,” he muttered.

Revik only nodded, once, not answering.

Maygar looked between them, but Revik got the impression he understood, too.

So did Ditrini, who was staring at Jon, as well.

The floor shook again, hard enough that Revik fell into the guard, unable to catch his weight without his arms or hands.

His suspicion turned into fact. The last few shakes hadn’t been man-made.

His mind slid through details even as Revik incorporated the realization into his overall awareness of the logistics of their current situation. The jolt hadn't rumbled out from a distance the way a combustion blast would have. It had been immediate, pretty much right under his feet. More of an impact concussion than an explosion, like a boulder falling off one of the buildings above and slamming into the cement...only it had been too strong, and too jarring to be anything that would be moving above ground, or even something hitting the streets from above.

No way that had been a car accident. Or even a subway.

It felt and sounded more like two buildings smashing into one another.

“We may have an act of god on our hands yet, brother,” Ditrini said, smiling at him. “Who do you think the gods are pulling for, in our little battle of wills?”

Revik didn’t bother to answer that, either.

Ditrini's eyes swiveled towards his, their silver irises unmoving as they assessed Revik's face. Nothing in that expression illuminated what the seer might be thinking.

Even so, Revik found himself certain the seer was thinking about Allie.

Revik watched Ditrini scan him, even as the silver eyes shot back down the tunnel in the direction from which they'd come, narrowing back towards the basement of the hotel. Revik couldn't tell much, but the longer he watched Ditrini’s face, the more he found himself thinking they could be in trouble, and from more than just Ditrini himself.

Ditrini frowned at him openly that time, his silver eyes shining in the yisso torches.

After another pause, he hit the button to open the line for the transmitter in his ear.

"What's going on up there?" Ditrini said.

He spoke in accented English that time.

A silence fell, where Revik thought he could almost hear the response.

"How the hell could that have happened?" Ditrini snapped. "Where are the SCARB teams? You must know we're cut off...if this segment floods..."

Whoever was on the other end was talking fast. Fast enough that Ditrini eventually fell silent. After another pause, he cursed, loudly and in Mandarin.

"What other exits do you have mapped?" he said. Another pause. "That is not acceptable! The Adhipan is right behind us! I told you, we––"

Again, whoever was on the other end cut him off.

"Well, we can't go back," Ditrini snapped after another pause. "Get rid of them! Or find some way to turn them around, before––"

The voice cut him off, and that time, Revik found himself fighting to keep from trying to scan the Lao Hu infiltrator. A third party. Perhaps a fourth.

SCARB, possibly? Or possibly NYPD. Perhaps even one of the private security teams might be tracking them by now, too. Was it possible they could be rescued by the New York branch of SCARB, thanks to Chan's new friend and Balidor's connections to the locals?

The thought brought a mix of emotions, not all of them relief.

Revik would go after Allie, of course, but he couldn’t help feeling sick at the thought of how long that could take without Ditrini to lead them there. When he glanced at Jon, the other man mouthed a single word.

Floods?

Revik looked away, feeling Ditrini’s eyes on them both.

His mind continued to move through scenarios, faster this time.

He could see this ending badly, in a number of ways.

Multiple parties with guns. Now an earthquake. Floods.

Allie already gone.

Trapped in the tunnel. Possibly by human forces, who also wanted them dead. Ditrini could manipulate them if he had numbers behind him...but not if Cass and Shadow left him high and dry, or sent the human reinforcements themselves to take Revik, Maygar and Jon.

Revik didn't really want to know what Ditrini might do if his back were sufficiently against the wall. Ditrini would likely just kill Revik outright, if faced with capture. Revik had zero doubt that Ditrini would want him dead, if Ditrini thought he would die, too.

If nothing else, Ditrini would want him dead to get to Allie, if he thought he wouldn’t gain access to her himself. He would want to make sure no one else did, either.

He was that kind of fuck.

Jon mouthed the word at him again.

Floods?

Revik could only frown in reply, shaking his head in a bare warning without taking his eyes off Ditrini as the guards started once more pushing the three of them down the tunnel’s corridor. The splashing through the water at the bottom of the cement curve provided some sound cover, at least. Glancing at Maygar, then back at Jon, Revik decided to risk trying to get his opinion on what was happening.

"5.5?" he mouthed. "Or 6?"

Jon stared at him, blank-eyed. Then understanding seemed to reach him.

Glancing up, then around them without slowing his steps, he looked sobered by the news, rather than reassured. "Not a good place to be, man," he said. “What would the rebels do?"

"Shut your mouth!" a large, burly-looking Chinese guard snapped in Prexci. He cuffed the back of Jon's head with a hand the size of Jon's face, nearly plowing him face-forward into the water as he walked. He caught hold of Jon’s cuffed arms before he could fall, shoving him forward in the same motion. "...Or we'll shut it for you."

Revik frowned, feeling the guard behind him rearranging his grip on the chains linking his upper arms together without ceasing to steer him forward. From the man's skin temperature and pulse alone, Revik could tell the guards were edgy, too.

Even as he thought it, another hard jolt moved the floor under his feet.

Revik found himself thrown roughly into the curved pipe wall.

Losing his balance with his bound arms, he fell to one knee, landing painfully on something hard under the few inches of water in the pipe’s lowest curve. The shaking began to lessen, but not before the guard behind him grabbed hold of the back of his collar. The muscular seer also fell into the wall, catching his weight with one hand as he jerked Revik sideways, tearing at his neck from the connecting strands of the organic collar that wrapped around his spine.

Gasping a curse, Revik bit his tongue against the pain.

As soon as the shaking stopped, Revik was jerked back to his feet, before he could try to get up on his own. He couldn't help noticing that the two guards holding him seemed to be having almost as much trouble as he had staying upright. The ones holding Jon and Maygar only seemed to have marginally better luck, but Jon at least managed to stay on his feet, mostly by falling into the guards instead of off to the side.

Revik glanced around them as they began once more to walk, feeling even more like a trapped animal.

All of them did, he noticed. The guards and he and Maygar and Jon, even Ditrini, walked fast, but each held a different type of listening posture, their faces slightly lifted as they gazed into the darkness of the sewer tunnel.

The only sound was their feet splashing and echoing through water.

Revik heard the silence behind them and realized that Wreg and Balidor must be adjusting their strategy to account for the earthquakes, too. The fact that they were behind him and Allie wasn’t hit him harder that time, bringing a sharp pain to his chest, the worst he'd let himself feel since he realized they’d been breached, that he couldn’t get to her.

Regret at how he'd told her about her condition hit him in the same set of seconds.

Gods, what a coward he was. He was so afraid she wouldn't be thrilled to hear the news, given everything else going on, given Cass and the disease and whatever else. He knew they’d argue about what she should and shouldn’t do, whether they should even stay in New York, and he was afraid she would be angry at him, at best, or at worst that she'd have mixed feelings about having kids with him at all, given what she knew about him and his own upbringing.

Ditrini gave him a sharp look.

Revik forced his mind silent.

The sickness and pain in his chest worsened though, and he couldn’t quite fight it out of his light. A part of him almost couldn't be made to care, though. If Cass had Allie, or Shadow, or both, it wouldn’t matter anymore. Menlim would know the second he looked at her.

Of course, that assumed he hadn’t known already.

His mouth hardened as he let his eyes focus back on the Lao Hu infiltrator.

Revik had hardened his light against the other’s reaction, but still found himself surprised at what he saw on Ditrini’s face. Instead of being delighted with the intel Revik had just provided him, Ditrini looked angry. Openly angry, and in a way Revik hadn't seen on the older seer before, not even when Ditrini first returned to consciousness in the brig of that aircraft carrier and realized how Revik and Allie had tricked him and taken him hostage.

He'd been angry then, sure...but that supreme certainty and self-confidence hadn't left him, no matter what the Adhipan infiltrators threw at him. Revik never once felt that arrogance flag the entire time he’d spent watching Balidor's team begin preliminary interrogations.

This time, a different light shone from those silver eyes.

His fuller lips pulled into a frown, and Revik saw something like hatred rise to his expression, what might even have been a kind of powerlessness...as if Revik had just told them that he'd killed Ditrini's mother and made her into a stew to feed his dogs.

That cold look deepened, the longer Ditrini stared at Revik. The Lao Hu infiltrator looked torn now, too, as if fighting with whether to speak.

Instead he punched Revik in the face, hard.

Stopping in the tunnel, and causing the guards to stop around him, Ditrini hit Revik again. That time, he hit him hard enough for Revik to lose his balance. When the guards got out of the way, Revik dropped to his knees a second time. While he was still down, Ditrini kicked him in the ribs, once...twice...a third time.

Revik felt something crack, and let out a gasp.

“What makes you so sure the bitch’s pup is yours?” Ditrini spat. “I’d warrant I took a few more turns on her this past year than you have...Illustrious Sword.”

Other books

Living in Syn by Bobby Draughon
A World Without You by Beth Revis
Unknown by Unknown
Afterlife by Merrie Destefano
Desperate Chances by A. Meredith Walters
Sarah's Window by Janice Graham
Devil's Keep by Phillip Finch
Cowboys-Dont-Dance by Missy Lyons