Syphon's Song (23 page)

Read Syphon's Song Online

Authors: Anise Rae

BOOK: Syphon's Song
10.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Did you grab that bull?”

Bronte narrowed her eyes at the woman and then stood, as if rising to her feet from the chair where she’d been dumped exemplified her fizz. She dusted off her jeans and smoothed the wrinkles from Vincent’s undershirt.

“Oh ho! You did grab that bull. It’s written all over you. But you foolish girl! You didn’t hang on! Otherwise you wouldn’t be here. Now come on. No more running away.” Lucinda slapped her on the back. “You get out there and try again. Make me proud.”

Footsteps clattered down the stairs, fast and familiar with the terrain. Shoes, then legs came into view. It was the blond. “Vincent’s on his way. He’s mad.” His voice lilted up on the last words.

“Well,” Lucinda began with a huff, “Vincent was a wuss. He let down his guard. Take note of this, Gregor. See what happens when you don’t take care of your things? Someone takes them from you. Law of the universe.”

Gregor ran a hand through his short, spiky hair. He was tall and broad enough for the uniform, but his face didn’t match. It was too boyish. Too cute. “Speaking of laws of the universe as pertains to mystical energy… General, sir, you might be interested to know no one has been tempted to fight in the last forty-five minutes. That’s a record. We’re a cohesive, content team at the moment. Not counting McIssac. The syphon is working enough energy off us that we’re kind of…relaxed.”

She was? Bronte was completely blind to it.

“Maybe, Miss Lucinda, ma’am…maybe…you could tell Vincent she’s just going to stay here? Since, you know, she left him and all. He might take it better coming from a, uh…lady. What do you say?”

“I say no.” Bronte planted her feet and straightened her shoulders. “I decline your offer. Thank you for
asking.

Lucinda shrugged with a lift of her hand at Bronte, acknowledging her answer.

Just then, waves of energy spiraled into her. Another clatter of feet pounded down the stairs. A grunt, and a hard thud followed. Gregor’s feet dangled from the floor as Vincent pressed him into the wall.

His vibes had forecasted his arrival.

“Sorry, colonel.” The blond’s words were a barely audible gasp. “We saved her. Enforcers. Came in the gate.”

“You took her.” Vincent shook him. “And brought her to the basement.” His thick growl vibrated with such anger that Bronte could hardly understand him.

“My bad.” The blond’s words were as strangled as his throat.

Lucinda leaned down to her ear. “Bull. Balls. It’s the only way to handle these men. It’s good advice that no Mayflower momma is ever gonna give you.”

Gregor’s face turned red, then purple. His eyeballs bulged, though perhaps they were just watering. It was hard to tell in the dim light.

“Vincent, stop, please.” Bronte shuffled closer, coming within arms’ reach.

He looked at her, eyes wild with rage. He dropped the man to the floor.

“Thank you.”

The blond gasped for breath as Vincent stepped past him. He wrapped one hand tightly around her waist, the other around the back of her neck. His hands burned against her cold skin, which had soaked in the damp chill of this awful room. His mouth came down on hers, hard and demanding. She forgot to be embarrassed. His energy swirled into her syphon like a storm’s wrath. In his kiss, she tasted his desperation, his hurt.

This kiss wasn’t about lust.

He broke away, but didn’t let her go. His eyes no longer held a hint of blue. “We are going to talk.”

Bronte nodded. Fear loosened its grip. She hadn’t realized it held her so tightly until his presence unwound it. He’d rescued her.

The ache in her heart contracted. Guilt, remorse. She’d hurt him. He didn’t—couldn’t—let many people get close to him. He’d let her into his life, and she had walked out—for good reasons. But he would not see it that way.

“Where are your shoes?” The demand in his voice was coated with a helpless fury.

She looked down at her feet, silent. Her missing shoes belonged in another lifetime. She didn’t want to explain here.

“Well,” Lucinda sang. “I am going to make breakfast.” She strode to the stairs, put her hands on her hips and looked down at Vincent’s victim. “You wanna come help me, Gregor? Or are you gonna sit on the floor and pout all day?”

Gregor looked up at her with bleary eyes.

She shook her head with a disappointed frown and marched upstairs.

Vincent turned his glare on General Wilen.

“I had to find out,” the general protested calmly, though a hint of regret tinged his voice.

“You should have called me the moment you were planning to take her!” Rage punched through his words.

“Don’t take it personally. I woulda done it to anyone to stop this damn group of terrorists. Besides, I left you a message. You didn’t check ’em, did you?” The general shook his head. “You’re new to figuring out how to handle love and the job. But be quick, boy. We don’t have time for mistakes.”

“You called last night while we were at the symphony. About the codes in the songs. You did not call to tell me you took her! At the very least, as her temporary sponsor, the family should have been notified.” Vincent prowled toward the man. “She did not deserve this.”

The general held out a hand. “Alright. I’ll call the next time.”

“There won’t be a next time.” Vincent’s roar hurt her ears.

The general shrugged.

He wasn’t guaranteeing anything, Bronte thought.

Wilen shifted his gaze to her. “Remember that tune somebody was throwing above the noise of the symphony’s crowd?”

Bronte blinked at the general’s abrupt switch of topic.

The general continued. “That song was bomb number three that went wrong. The code boys played those songs over and over. Someone was humming that song in the lobby during intermission.” He turned to Vincent. “I think someone is coming after her, Vin. Maybe they’re mad she switched the songs up? Seems a likely scenario.” He nodded to himself. “If I wasted all those pounds of explosives, I’d be mad too. ’Course, it wouldn’t have taken me four bombs to understand I had a problem with my system. That’s one thing we have going for us. They’re not as smart as we are.”

The general paced the scuffed floor. “It ain’t Claude who was humming that song. I know that. Because he’s on his way to my basement. I’m hoping our hummer is also our newspaper clipper. That would solve two problems in one. It’d be convenient.”

“What about one of the musicians?” Vincent asked. “Is one of them sympathetic to the plight of the Nons? Or the conductor? He said he’d been following her career. Maybe he’s been in her audience.”

“I would have seen him. I think.” Bronte tried to remember the faces in the crowd, but everything was a blur in her mind; she was too drained to think.

“Disguised maybe.” Gregor groaned as he sat up.

Vincent studied him and then shifted to her, worry etched in the grim line of his mouth. He cupped her cheeks in his hands. “You have to stop running away, Bronte. You need to stay where it’s safe. And I can’t keep you safe if you leave the gates.” He dropped his forehead to the top of her hair for a moment before he looked her in the eyes. “For your own good, consider yourself housebound.”

“Good idea,” the general said. “Nobody gets in. Nobody gets out. Nice and safe in your little cabin.”

Disbelief barreled through her so hard it ought to have punched through Vincent as well. “If you think you’re going to spell me into your house, think again! I will not tolerate having my freedom taken away. Besides that, all spells make me feel awful. I can’t even stand to be around them.”

“That’s not true. My spells don’t affect you like that.”

“Vincent!”

He couldn’t hold her glare; neither did he recant. She sighed, searching for some sort of mental equilibrium. This teeter-totter of emotions, from terror to guilt to anger, was nauseating.

“I need out of this basement,” she whispered. She stepped over Gregor on the floor and climbed to the top of the stairs to a bright, sunny kitchen she’d not noticed on her way down.

The bearded man leaned against the counter. He had two black eyes and a tissue stuffed up one nostril. He glanced up at her from the newspaper spread between his hands. “You all talked out already? The general usually goes for hours.”

She stopped in the middle of the floor, her eyes widening at the headline of his paper.
Syphons: Dangerous Powers or Two-Bit Mages?

“Mage reporters are an imaginative bunch,” he said. His gaze fell back to the paper.

Another newspaper covered the kitchen table. She walked over and scanned the headline.
Syphon Pregnant with Rallis Heir,
followed by its subtitle,
Council Calls Dibs on Syphon Baby.

“Oh, goddess.” Her heart pounded too hard to breathe around.
“How did this happen? Where did they get this information?” Questions pirouetted in her head too quickly to grab them all. The world spun. Bronte slowly lost view of it.

A chair met the back of her legs and her chest touched her knees as Vincent pushed her down. “Breathe.” The hand against her neck burned hot against her clammy skin.

“I’m okay.” She pushed against his hand as she spoke through numb lips. Thick strands of hair fell around her face, blocking the light. She wiggled, but it was a minute before he let her sit up.

He brushed the hair from her eyes.

A glass of orange juice appeared before her, along with Lucinda’s command. “Drink.”

“Her name’s not given,” the bearded man said as he closed the paper. “Someone kept that to themselves, at least. It’s just B. Castle. Is that your stage name or something?”

Bronte stared at a corner of the kitchen, seeing nothing. “I compose my songs under that name, but no one ever saw them. Except for one song.”

He folded up the paper and rapped it against his leg. “There’s a photo of the two of you in here. It won’t be long before someone connects a syphon named B. Castle with Non-Mage Bronte Casteel.”

“And somebody thinks you and Vincent have done the dirty,” Lucinda observed as she cracked an abnormally large amount of eggs into a bowl.

That woman thrived on embarrassing and tormenting her. Bronte closed her eyes and gritted her teeth. She hated Lucinda at that moment. Purposefully turning her back on the other woman, she moved her gaze to Vincent. “Your mother?” she asked.

“She’d never leak anything to the press.”

Bronte swallowed hard. Did the culprit even matter? The heart of the matter focused on one thing: her escape. “Can you get me out of here, Vincent?” She leaned her elbow on the table, twisting her shoulders to face him.

He nodded. “I have to meet with the general one last time and then we’ll go home.”

“No.” She interrupted him. “That’s not what I meant.” This wasn’t the time or place for this conversation, but she couldn’t bring herself to stop. “Get me out of the Republic.” She stared at him, her chest rising and falling too quickly. “I can’t stay here. It’s not safe. If I leave now, I can salvage this. Switch names. Make it so no one can connect me to B. Castle. If anyone discovers who I am, no one will hire me in Europe either.” There weren’t a lot of mages outside the Republic. They were considered spooky, dangerous people. “Help me get out before it’s too late. Please, Vincent.” She bit her lip. Worry, pain and fright all flooded into her until she thought she might burst.

He took her face in his hands, the blue of his eyes still dark with fury. She could see his answer in them before he spoke it.

“No.”

She closed her eyes. A tear dripped down her cheek and twined through his fingers.

He brushed her cheek dry. “We will figure this out.”

“There’s nothing to figure out! If I stay, I face the penalty for being a syphon. If I go, I live.”

How had she come to this?

She should have fought harder against the Rallises. Against Vincent. They’d twisted the rules on her, but she should have thought of something…thrown a tantrum maybe. They wouldn’t have taken her to the symphony if she’d been kicking and screaming. She should have defied the Casteels as well and refused to deliver their message. Her mother’s call had been her cue to move out of the Republic. She’d missed it, blind as her life’s conductor lifted his baton to direct her. And she should have refused to play Claude’s wacky songs from the start. Another cue missed. She could point to a half-dozen of them when she could have prevented all this from happening. She’d done nothing, clinging to the charade she’d invented as if it were armor. It laid it tatters around her now.

Other books

Happy Accidents by Jane Lynch
The Call-Girls by Arthur Koestler
Old Yeller by Fred Gipson
Fellowship of Fear by Aaron Elkins
Nicole Peeler - [Jane True 01] by Tempest Rising (html)
Keep It Pithy by Bill O'Reilly