Drowning in Fire (14 page)

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Authors: Hanna Martine

BOOK: Drowning in Fire
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Greater than the Queen.
Keko, what do you think you’re doing? What did you bring upon yourself? And why do your uncle and brother want such different outcomes?

“I’ll bring her back safe,” Griffin said to the chief. “The Source will remain untouched.”

He heard Bane walk away, the Chimeran’s signature trailing after him, the sound of the glass panes rattling in the back door as he made his exit. But Griffin didn’t go after him. If the general refused to give him any answers about his cryptic plea, Griffin didn’t owe him anything in return. Keko’s life was Griffin’s goal. His sole purpose.

The chief’s gaze drifted over Griffin’s shoulder and out the window that framed an overgrown garden. “Yes,” he murmured, almost to himself. “I’m sure it will remain untouched.”

And Griffin didn’t know what suddenly bothered him more: the troubled, conflicted look in the chief’s tired eyes and the anxious bounce of his knee, or the fact that his Chimeran signature was essentially nonexistent.

SIX

Griffin hiked out of the Chimeran valley on the opposite side from which he’d arrived. Even if he’d wanted to hop in a car and close the gap between him and Keko with an engine, there was no way even the best four-wheel drive could have managed on this landscape. It wasn’t vertical, but pretty damn close. He had to pay smart attention to where he put his hands and feet, the land soft from rain, the vegetation sometimes giving out and making him slide.

This terrain had probably been kid’s play to Keko. Her stamina and strength were already something incredible, a gift of her Chimeran blood, but she’d also grown up here, among the birds with their strange songs, and the ferns and vines that looked injected with steroids. A dangerous advantage for her to have, and he dared let himself worry that maybe he’d underestimated how far ahead she’d gotten.

But then, he had a damn good advantage over her.

When he was well away from the valley, heaving for breath on top of a rise that swept back down to the stronghold and even farther away to the ocean, he unzipped his pack and pulled out Adine’s sensor. A slim silver piece with a screen larger than most smart phones, it fit perfectly in one hand. He flicked it on and the screen jumped, coming to life as it slowly scanned and displayed in uneven, colorful circles the altitude pitches of this mountainous land. Red for the tops of the hills that faded into dark blue at sea level. A jumble of hills and crags, canyons and bodies of water.

He could feel the faint tug of the signatures of the collective Chimeran population far off to his right. There, on the screen, in blinking, shifting white, a graphic cloud echoed what he sensed.

Also, a thin, faint, white streak smeared northwest across the screen, zigzagging through the concentric, colorful circles, traveling down the slopes and back up again. Away from the valley. Away from the spot in which he stood now.

Keko.

He could not physically sense her signature anymore, but it was right there in brilliant clarity, in a visual form no Ofarian, or anyone else, had ever laid eyes on before. The perfect trail for him to follow.

He realized, with a cold feeling, that if this kind of technology should ever fall into the wrong hands, it wouldn’t just be Adine who would be compromised. Every Secondary would be vulnerable. He’d have to get her assurance that this particular device—since he had been the one to commission and pay for it—was the only type of tracker in existence.

But . . . one situation at a time.

Griffin stared at the device and memorized Keko’s path, intermittently dropping the screen to look up and match the digital signature trail with the topography spread out before him. Once he had it committed to memory, he turned off the tracker and stashed it in his pack.

He would never catch up with her on foot. Not with her physical ability, not with her two-day lead and knowledge of the landscape, and not with the day’s light starting to die.

But he’d close a good chunk of the distance if he used his magic.

He opened his mouth and filled it with Ofarian words. He threw out his arms, tilted back his head, and opened up his whole being to let his magic take hold. The language of his ancestors, the one that had originated on another world somewhere up among the stars, spun through him, taking his human body. It sank into him, shifting the molecules of his hair and bones and organs to water, to the element that defined his people.

In fiction, Primaries called magic “power.” He remembered that the first time he’d heard that term as a boy, he’d found it odd. But that was before his body had changed, before he’d actually wielded water and discovered how truly special he was. As soon as he matured he understood the synonym for magic as “power,” because that’s exactly how he felt. Powerful. It had never changed for him. Using it this time in the wet Hawaiian forest as a thirty-five-year-old was as humbling and wonderful as the very first time in his parents’ living room at age thirteen.

Opening his eyes, he looked at his arm, a translucent, shimmering appendage that defied the rules of this world. To transform his body entirely into water was simple and demanded little from either himself or his magic, but he needed his clothing and he needed what he carried on his back. That was a different process entirely, and it required an awful lot.

Digging deep, as deep into his powers as was possible, he centered his concentration, and then
pushed
his magic outward. It shot out from the confines of his body, stabbing into the cotton threads of his clothes and the nylon strands of his pack, and the many solid pieces of the contents inside. He changed everything, from Adine’s signature sensor down to his scant camper’s food.

Everything, water.

But with gravity and the steep up-and-down terrain dotted with more types of plants than he could ever hope to know, pushing a flow of water overland wouldn’t be the best way to go. Unless . . .

It was risky—it would drain his energy even faster; it would put him in danger of losing his magic altogether—but in the end it would help him the most.

He weighed the options. Chance losing Keko
and
the Senatus, or chance kissing his water magic good-bye.

It was a no brainer. He was strong. He was centered. He was steadfast. Catching up to Keko would keep her alive, give him the Senatus, and create a better future for Henry. Magic was nothing, in the grand scheme of things. Being Ofarian meant more than magic; Cat Heddig had taught him that. If he had to let it go, so be it. The end absolutely justified the means.

So he became vapor.

The magic tugged hard at his senses and his control, but he took hold of it, quick and firm. His body and belongings divided, dissipated, rising up from the earth. Water to steam. He’d only done this a handful of times in his life—the risks of going to vapor were impressed upon young Ofarians very early—but the skill came back easily. It was the energy he worried about. So what was he doing hovering around navel-gazing for?

He grabbed a gust of wind and rode it. The invisible force yanked him from his hilltop and whisked him northwest. Over the steep drop of the land, across the open space, above the trees. Cutting his pursuit time in half, maybe even more.

Still, he wished he had an air elemental with him to speed things up, to direct traffic so to speak. As it was, he had to ride the existing air currents, expelling even more energy to keep himself on track to follow Keko’s trail.

But that wasn’t even the toughest part. It was keeping himself together. That was the danger of this form. If he spread his vapor too thin there was the threat of it snapping, coming apart. Separating. And if an Ofarian in vapor form lost control of his molecules, too much space coming between them, there was no getting them back together again.

The most tame Ofarian campfire stories described water elementals regaining their bodies after going vapor only to find their magic was gone. The most evil, the most disgusting, had Ofarians coming back into human form without limbs or heads.

That wouldn’t happen to Griffin. He refused to believe it would. He was leader of all Ofarians. And his purpose was paramount. Not even all the powers of the universe—this one and the next—could deny him that. He didn’t fucking care if that was arrogant. He had to believe it. He had to put his trust in it.

As a cloud of steam, he crossed streams and soared over tree canopies, darting through leafy sugar cane farms and scaring feral cats. The drain on his energy taunted him. He could feel it seeping away, his magic and his will squeezing every last bit out of every last drop of strength before he reached for the next. But he was gaining ground. If he was lucky, he’d catch up to Keko before nightfall.

Then all of a sudden he lost the trail, one hill looking too much like the other, the vapor form messing with his awareness. He had to go solid again, had to check the signature tracker, or else he’d be doing even more damage by heading too far in the wrong direction.

He hated to do it, to waste energy on retransformation, knowing he’d have to turn vapor all over again, but he did it, coming back into his body on the edge of ranchland, ten or so cows lingering in the distance. It took longer than he’d thought, and when he swung his pack around his body and ripped open the zipper, the tracker wasn’t fully operational.

He panicked, muttering, “No, no, no! Come on, work!”

He zapped it with more magic, pulling out every last particle of water from its surface and innards. When he turned it on, it took a long time for the screen to flicker into color, even longer for it to register his own signature and the dragging line of Keko’s residual path. The images were patchy, and blinked in and out. The device vibrated oddly, like it was struggling to work. Quickly, he memorized what he saw on the screen. Turned out his aim was only a little bit off, and he made his course correction, committing to memory her new direction.

Next time he came back from either water or vapor form, he feared the sensor would not work at all. Never had any tech felt so unstable or glitchy in his hand. Usually Ofarians had to expend extra energy to transform not-living articles, but he’d never had to worry about tech not working after re-transformation. Perhaps it was the specific mix of magic and technology that Adine had used. Perhaps Ofarian powers didn’t play so nicely with whatever it was that she’d injected into the circuitry.

He’d have to bring that up to her when he returned to San Francisco—no doubt her genius mind could come up with a solution—but for now he had to make the blip of information it fed him count.

He turned to water, and then vapor again, his magic trembling with exertion, and headed back out, riding the air. He zoomed around the dark slashes of twilit trees. He curled around wind-wracked bushes bursting with flowers. He rode as many correct currents as he could, and had to fight against others to keep on his designated path. Push and pull, push and pull.

In the middle of the night he could feel his magic dying. Lowering himself to the ground he assumed solid form. He collapsed in sleep for a few hours, shoveled food in his mouth to build up his strength, and then started out again. Broken daylight just cracked the horizon.

He hadn’t wanted to be right, but he was—the tracker didn’t work at all. But he remembered which direction Keko had gone. And he liked to imagine that he could feel her now, that he was getting close enough for his own Ofarian senses to do their thing.

He also took reassurance in knowing that she had to rest, too, and that she didn’t know she was being followed. If he slept four hours to her seven or eight, and wrung as much water magic out of his body as he could, maybe he could catch up to her when night fell again.

But that single dose of food and brief rest wasn’t nearly enough, and his magic only lasted a few hours. His molecules started to shift midair and he had to drag them along like dead weight. In the last few miles, the burn on his psyche and the ability to hold his form together became simply too much. He had to choose: continue to try to hold his vaporized body together and push just a little farther with no guarantee what it would do to his human form, or turn himself solid and go on by foot.

Before he could decide, he lost his grip on the vapor, the last finger of control releasing the final bit of magic. It happened above ground, before he had a chance to lower himself and find his feet. His body coalesced, its solid form sucking in the vapor, and then he fell, snapping through branches and bouncing off huge, arching banyan tree roots, to hit the ground hard.

He tried to get up but he had hardly any energy left. Breath sawed in and out of his lungs. His sight wavered. Every muscle protested movement, but Griffin ignored every complaint.

He hauled himself up, leaned against the banyan tree and got his bearings, and continued after Keko on foot. Weaving, weak, he needed every yard, every step, every inch. He had to keep moving.

And then, when dusk came, he finally sensed her.

She was a prick of light in the corner of his mind, a low and steady buzz setting into his blood, pulling him forward. Though his feet were leaden, he pushed on because there was a good chance her signature could go cold, and without the tracker he’d lose her.

She was moving slowly, methodically. So carefully that even in his exhausted state, he closed some distance between them as dusk gave way to night. As he drew nearer, the sound of a waterfall grew louder, obliterating the otherwise eerie silence that cloaked Hawaiian nights.

He trudged into a thick stand of giant ferns that looked positively prehistoric in scale and shape. Pushing aside the drooping fronds and charging forward, he almost pitched himself into a steep ravine, the dramatic drop-off ending a hundred feet at the stream bed below. Moonlight filled the space between one side of the ravine and the other; it was deep but not so wide across, maybe thirty feet. Peering to the right, it seemed to empty into the violent ocean a good mile or so away. To the left, it carved a big slice out of the dramatically sloped land, but the deepening darkness hid just how far up it went.

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