Caged (Talented Saga) (12 page)

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Authors: Sophie Davis

BOOK: Caged (Talented Saga)
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My stomach sank.
I genuinely liked Ernest, even considered us friends. I really hoped that he wasn’t a Coalition spy.

Sensing my trepidation, Mac spoke softly.
“Sometimes, the people closest to us are the best at deceiving us.” He gave me a pointed look. “You, of all people, should know that.”

Suddenly, I loathed Mac.
Just when I’d resolved to try moving past Donavon’s infidelity, Mac threw it in my face. Donavon had been the person closest to me until he betrayed me.

Janet shifted uncomfortably as she took in my distraught reaction to Mac’s hurtful words.
“Can this not wait?” she asked him in a low voice.

“No.
It cannot,” Mac replied shortly, refusing to even look at her, his gray eyes fixed on mine.

“Janet, would you mind running to my room and getting me something to wear?” I asked, determined not to be the first to break the silent battle of wills between myself and Mac.
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw her nod her agreement. After giving Mac an if-looks-could-kill stare, she walked noiselessly from the room.

Mac held my gaze, his stare so intense that if I’d known what was good for me, I would’ve backed down.
After all, he had the advantage; he loomed over my hospital bed where I lay, still shaken from Janet’s account of my seizure. Sensing my resistance, Mac moved closer, a low rumble starting in his chest that was meant to intimidate me.

“Why is this so urgent?” I demanded, still refusing to give in, even though the weight of his mind bore down on me.

“Natalia, we have a SPY in the Agency,” he spat back, eyes flashing angrily and menacingly.

“I understand that, but what did Penny find that makes you so confident that he is our spy?
I’ve talked to him, and he is a truthful person. I bet there are plenty of Agency Operatives with family members in the Coalition,” I said, gritting my teeth.

“Exactly, you have
talked
to him. You have not dug into his mind to see what he is hiding.”

“We don’t know that he’s hiding anything!”
I yelled.

“No, you are right, we don’t.
But we also don’t know that he is not,” Mac replied pointedly. “I did some further checking into Ernest’s claim that he ‘filled in’ for sick Operatives in the Crypto Division. That apparently has happened on several occasions over the past year, but an appointment like that needs to be cleared by me, and it was not. I’ve suspended the Crypto Supervisor here at School, pending an investigation.”

His words cooled the blood boiling in my veins; that was exactly what I’d been afraid of.
When Ernest confided that piece of information to me, I’d known that it was a serious breach of protocol. I’d hoped that it would prove to be miscommunication somewhere in the chain of command or that Mac would confirm that he’d sanctioned the temporary placement. Apparently, that was not the case.

“Do you plan on having
me interrogate everyone that could possibly be the spy?” I demanded, feeling the fight go out of me. Mac was right. Ernest’s actions were suspect.

“Natalia, you have been here a week, and have found nothing!” he shouted at me, his cool demeanor cracking like ice on a frozen lake.
“I am not going to wait around for another situation like what happened in Nevada! I will not see another Operative brought back from a mission at death’s door! I will not lose more Talents to the Coalition. I want this person found and I want him found now.”

Shame filled me at the passion in his words.
He wasn’t uncaring. He had been there when the Medics brought me off the plane in Kansas. Mac had seen me broken and nearly ruined. Mac had painstakingly helped me to recover, both mentally and physically, from what Ian Crane and his men had done to me. Mac was the one pushing the Medical to find a cure for my condition. All he wanted in return was the same thing that I should want – to find the person who’d nearly cost me my life.

“Mac, I’m sorry,” I began, biting back the tears that burned behind my eyeballs.

“I don’t want sorry, I want answers, Natalia.” His voice was just above a whisper, and deadly serious as he leaned his face close to mine. I think that I preferred him yelling. Swallowing any further replies, I nodded my understanding.

 

Chapter Twelve

 

Janet returned soon after with a pair of jeans and soft cream-colored sweater.
Thankful to shed the gray medical tunic, I dressed quickly while Janet and Mac spoke in loud whispers in the hallway.

“I don’t think that you should be pushing her so hard,” Janet whispered angrily.

“I don’t remember asking your opinion,” Mac snapped.

“Are you not the slightest bit concerned about her condition?”
Janet’s voice raised an octave, her words laced with venom.

“You know what I am concerned with, Janet?
I am concerned about the traitor – the spy – that we have in our Agency.” I could almost hear Mac’s teeth grinding together with the effort of keeping his voice to an audible whisper. “Natalia is the best chance that I have of finding that person. But don’t you think for a second that I don’t care about her well-being. I brought her in to my home, I raised her, and you, of all people, know the lengths that I would go to protect her. So don’t you dare accuse me of not caring. She is every bit as much a daughter to me as Donavon is a son.” Mac was furious. Tension rolled through the closed door. The air was thick with the vibrations emanating off both of them.

I loudly opened the door to my room and stepped out in to the hallway.
Both Janet and Mac turned quickly. “I’m ready,” I said quietly, effectively putting an end to their bickering.

Mac, Janet, and I set off across the campus.
Neither of them looked at the other nor uttered a single word. Both were lost in their own angry thoughts.

Our destination was a small non-descript building on the very outskirts of the compound.
I’d never actually been inside the building, but had wandered past it on many occasions. Truthfully, I hadn’t been exactly sure what purpose the structure served – apparently interrogations.

My head was still fuzzy from all the drugs that Dr. Thistler had used to sedate me.
My body ached with every step I took, making me regret my eagerness to jump out of bed. Janet was right; I wasn’t ready for this.

A dimly-lit guard booth materialized in the dark night.
I could make out three individuals – two standing outside, and one inside. Penny’s flaming red hair was starkly illuminated by the light from the guard booth. Donavon stood next to her, anxiously shifting from one foot to the other, eyes intently studying the blades of grass beneath.

“Hi, there,”
I mentally called to him. His head shot up and our eyes met across the great distance. He turned and said something to Penny, who turned and looked in our direction. Donavon began closing the gap between us.

“I’m glad that you’re here,”
I sent. Donavon smiled, and I felt relief flood through him. He’d been worried that I’d rethought my earlier feelings of camaraderie. I hadn’t. I really had missed him, and I was resigned to making the best of our current situation. After all, it wasn’t Donavon’s fault that he’d been sprung on me.

“Tal!” he exclaimed, wrapping me in his arms.
“Are you sure that you’re up for this?”

I glanced at Mac; the hard set of his jaw and coldness of his eyes told me that I’d better be.

“Of course,” I lied. No, I wasn’t ready for this, but it needed to be done. If nothing else, my interrogation would prove Ernest’s innocence. Granted, that would not put me any closer to identifying the actual culprit, but at least I could rest assured that another person I counted among my friends hadn’t deceived me.

The four of us made our way to the guard station where Penny waited.

“How did you know that it was us standing here? You had to be like a hundred yards away!” she exclaimed, hugging me.

“Penny, I think the people manning the satellites can spot your hair from space,” I replied, only half-joking.
My point was valid; Penny’s bright red-orange locks were like a lighthouse beckoning to ships in the night.

“Ha
ha.” She rolled her eyes.

“Natalia has
work to do. So if social hour is over, we should really get this over with,” Mac interjected. I nodded in response to him, then glanced conspiratorially at Penny and Donavon. Mac was being a little dramatic. Janet kept shooting him dirty looks when he was sure to notice. It felt good to have somebody like her in my corner.

The four of us followed Mac to the front of the building. There was another guard stationed inside, who exchanged a nod with Mac as we passed.
We followed Mac to an elevator bank, then waited in silence for the ping that signaled the elevator’s arrival. The doors slid soundlessly open, and we filed in. Mac pressed his thumb to a scanner on the front-right panel of the elevator, and a green light flashed, confirming Mac’s identity. He entered a two-digit number on to the touch pad and the car sped downward.

The elevator gave another soft ping, indicating our arrival on the designated floor.

The hallway was cool and impersonal, with dreary, gray walls. I shuddered, hugging myself as we followed Mac to a door marked 5B. Inside was a waiting room with a long rectangular table, sitting underneath a one-way mirror. On the table sat several monitors, each displaying a different set of data, and three plastic chairs sat in front of it, facing the mirror. On the other side of the glass was Ernest.

“Let’s get this over with,” Mac said to me.
I nodded and took a deep breath. Janet gave me a tight-lipped smile and nodded encouragingly. Exhaling slowly, I opened the door to the adjoining room.

Ernest was staring nervously at his hands folded in his lap, but looked up when I entered.
His hazels eyes darted nervously between me and his reflection. The air was thick with the stench of body odor and anxiety. I fought the urge to wrinkle my nose in disgust.

“Talia?” he said uncertainly. “What’s going?
Why am I here?”

“I just want to ask you some questions,” I said soothingly.

His eyes darted left, right, up, and down. “Did you have to drag me here just to ask me a couple of questions?” He laughed nervously as he wiped sweaty palms on his shirt, leaving damp handprints in their wake.

“I’m sorry.
This is just a formality.” I tried to keep my voice light. The smell of his sweat, sweet and pungent, consumed the small room. Forcing back the bile rising in my throat, I focused on his face. Beads of moisture glistened just below his hairline. I didn’t need the monitors on the other side of the mirror to tell me that his heart was beating much more quickly than normal; I could hear the soft thump-thump with my own ears.

Slowly, I moved to sit across from Ernest.
I began with the easy questions: name, place of birth, parents. I read the answers as they popped into his head. Every answer that he spoke aloud matched the one that I read from his mind. Finding my rhythm, I moved on to more personal questions – those that Donavon’s mental voice fed me from the other side of the glass. I asked questions about his family in California, and his father’s reputed communications with them. I delved into his own personal relationship with his extended relatives.

Hours passed as I dissected every detail of Ernest’s life.
Finally, when my mental and physical exhaustion peaked, I turned to the mirror and spoke aloud.

“It’s not him, Mac.”

Donavon’s mental voice answered me.
“Search deeper,”
it responded.

I glared at the mirror and thought unspeakable words in Mac’s direction.

“We need to be sure, Natalia,”
Mac’s mental voice responded. Scowling, I turned back to face Ernest.

“Give me your hands, Ernest,” I commanded in a low voice.
He obeyed without hesitation. “Look into my eyes,” I ordered. He raised his hazel eyes, the pupils so dilated that they appeared black, and reflected a distorted image of my face. Locking our gazes, I concentrated as hard as I could, and opened my mind to Ernest’s. Wading through his most recent memories of teaching here at the School, I saw nothing of use. I systematically moved backwards, pulling every memory and experience that Ernest had ever had from his mind. I felt the last vestiges of Ernest’s willpower leave him, and every thought that he’d ever had crashed over me in a tidal wave of memories.

No longer able to distinguish where my mind ended and Ernest’s began, I started shaking and gulping air.
It was quickly becoming hard to breathe. I truly felt as if I was drowning in Ernest’s mind.

“Natalia,”
a sharp voice snapped in my head.
“Natalia, pull back!”
the voice – Donavon’s – screamed. But it was so far away, sounding like a distant echo in a long hallway, and I couldn’t pull back. I was in too deep.

“Tal, listen to my voice.
Pull back,”
Donavon frantically ordered. I tried to concentrate on his words, but it was next to impossible with Ernest’s memories swirling like a funnel cloud inside of my mind. The interrogation room ceased to exist. I was floating, becoming part of Ernest as I pulled more and more of his life into me.

“Tal, please.
Follow the sound of my voice. You need to come back to me,”
Donavon urged. The intensity of his words, coupled with the strength of his will, brought me back to reality. I was still entrenched in Ernest’s thoughts, but it was becoming easier to separate our minds.

Summoning all of my willpower, I yanked my hands from Ernest, who was now clinging to me with a death grip.
I ripped my eyes away, and felt the imaginary rope that had connected us snap. Severing the bond hurt. I collapsed against the chair, feeling disoriented and shaking. I took deep breaths, and tried to calm the trembling in my hands. Donavon burst through the door, but stayed several feet back, scared to come any closer.

“Talia,” he said tentatively. I turned to look up at him; his face was blurry, and I blinked several times in an attempt to sharpen the image.
All of my senses felt dull and sluggish, like I’d just woken from a dream. He quickly knelt down beside my chair, taking my hands in his.

“Are you okay?
What happened?” he asked.

I shook my head, my tongue felt thick and too big for my mouth.
“Can I leave now?”
I asked him mentally. The need to get out of the room consumed me. I couldn’t breathe, couldn’t think. Dizziness filled my head as bile made its way up my throat. I needed fresh air, now.

“Aloud,” he answered.
I looked at him, confused. “You need to speak out loud right now. I don’t think that you should be communicating mentally – you’re too vulnerable.”

I looked back across the table at Ernest.
His head was slumped against his chest and he was drooling. The scene cut through my haze like a knife piercing my heart.

“Is he going to be okay,” I whispered, close to tears.

“Get her out of here.” Mac’s voice came from the doorway before Donavon could answer.

Behind Mac stood two Medics, and all three entered the tiny room.
The Medics each took one of Ernest’s arms, lifting him out of his seat and in to a waiting wheelchair. I stared blankly after the trio.

“Get her out of here,” Mac repeated.

“Still think that this was such a good idea?” Donavon demanded, rounding on his father.

“She will be fine.
She just needs to rest,” Mac replied shortly.

“What about Ernest?
Will he be okay?” I asked, looking up at Mac.

“In time,” Mac answered without meeting my eyes.

Donavon rose to his full height and faced his father. Their eyes locked in a silent battle of wills, eerily similar to the one that had transpired between myself and Mac just hours before. Neither spoke, both men standing rigid, electricity crackling in the air around their bodies. Donavon’s hands were tightly fisted at his sides and a low growl sounded in his chest.

“Take Natalia back to her room,” Mac ordered his son, his words holding so much authority that I flinched.
Donavon sagged under the weight of his father’s command as he backed down. He never could stand up to his father, not that I blamed him. Mac was not the kind of person that most dared to challenge. Even Janet stood silently in the corner of the crowded room, too intimidated to make so much as a peep.

Donavon gently pulled me to my feet.
He wrapped one of his long arms around my shoulders and silently led me from the suffocating interrogation room. Penny quickly fell in step with us as we made our way to the elevator. She looked as tired and drained as I felt. Her eyes were bloodshot, and dark circles colored the hollows beneath.

No one spoke as we made our way back up the elevator and out into the night.
I let them lead me back across campus to my room. My mind was so numb that I barely registered my surroundings, and was surprised to find the three of us standing in my bedroom sooner rather than later.

“Why don’t I take it from here?” Penny said quietly to Donavon.
He looked at me questioningly. I managed to nod my head, indicating that he should go.

“You should sleep in.
The first people won’t be arriving until lunchtime,” he replied.

“Huh?”
People? Lunchtime? What was he talking about?

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