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"Okay," he said. "And remind me because I have something I need to tell you."
"What?" I asked.
"Later," he said. "Much later."
I leaned down and kissed his fevered temple. In his ear, I said, "I love you." Then I put him to sleep. He drifted off with just the dimmest of smiles on his face, but I could see the haunted look in his eyes as they closed. This gave more reason to continue on to what we headed to do.
Chapter Fifty-Five.
There are few reasons to go into extreme detail on what we did in Nevada. I don't regret the destruction we caused only because of the destruction the place had been a part in. It wasn't hard getting in, and out, and much as I don't want to speak about the insane number of people, both gov and experiment alike, I killed, I will. Only because I said I wouldn't skip out on anything, no matter how difficult or obscene.
Starch and I left Jonas with Philip at a hotel in a small town whose name I have long since forgotten. Jonas put up quite a verbal fight but, in the end, I won out. I gave him no choice. Philip and Jonas stayed. Starch stole a motorcycle someone left out on the street, and I rode on the back.
We waited until dark, just so our little fire would be more impressive.
We would hopefully meet less resistance.
I rode with my arms around his waist, trusting him explicitly to keep me safe and not crash. He drove like a maniac. The world flew by me, but I paid little attention. I was half afraid we'd be ambushed again, but that was not to be. Holt figured I was smarter than this, to be returning to the scene of the crime. Much to my disappointment, Holt was not there. His was the first mind I hunted for once close enough to the base.
Maybe disappointment isn't the word....
As it happened, I let Starch go in alone. It was better this way, and it gave him more confidence. I watched him from just inside the fence as he walked into the closest building. I trusted him enough to let him go by himself, but he went because he was afraid he was going to blow me to bits. I kept him in my mind and made sure he was safe.
I watched him light the world in flames.
It was brilliant and almost beautiful, the fireball that ignited in the place called S-4. For a minute or two, I thought Starch had gone up with the place. I even took a couple steps back when the first building erupted in a hundred foot wall of flame. When he walked out, a dark shadow amongst all that light, and naked as h.e.l.l since he didn't want to burn his clothes, I felt an old familiar wave of relief. He was safe and sound and completely unharmed.
Then all h.e.l.l broke loose.
People started running from inside the main buildings, scattering here and there in chaos. I saw soldiers dressed in fatigues and night clothes. Scientists dressed in white lab coats and pajamas ran towards the giant fireball that held mult.i.tudes of government secrets, trying to figure out a way to fight such a blaze. Others ran h.e.l.l bent towards safety. I saw yet others with their guns at the ready, thinking this was an attack, and others had only the clothes on their backs. Some, more than I like to think about, the ones who'd been inside the building, were long dead.
The fire spread quickly as Starch and I went over the fence and back to the stolen motorcycle. He donned his clothing, swung his leg over the bike and I got on behind him. As he drove off into the night, I looked back over my shoulder. The fire began to spread, embers floating up into the sky and lighting the dry brush. The second building was already ignited, and it wouldn't be long before the rest would be nothing more than ashes in the wind. It would take more than firefighters to knock down that blaze.
I turned back and put my cheek against Starch's back. The wind from our retreat whipped through my hair, and I knew it was time to cut it when we got back into the L.A. area. This was the thought that went through my head as we drove away from utter destruction. I needed a haircut.
Honestly, it really was that easy.
Chapter Fifty-Six.
Back in town, we ditched the motorcycle, not bothering to wipe off prints because, in all technicalities, we don't even exist, and we walked the few blocks back to the hotel. We walked in our own utter silence. The sounds of sirens echoed in the distance and a lot of the town was out examining the raging red glow on the horizon. We ignored the townspeople. They ignored us. No one had any clue we'd been the ones to have caused this disaster.
We found Jonas and Philip on the hood of Philip's car. Jonas was lying flat out, his head against the winds.h.i.+eld, staring at the starry sky, not caring in the slightest that there was a fireball catching everyone else's attention. Philip was cross legged, leaning forward with his chin in his hand. His eyes were on the glow beyond.
"Hey," Starch called out, lifting his hand in greeting.
Jonas sat up and smiled broadly when he saw me, teeth and all. I ran to him, leaped onto the car, and tackled him. We slid off the hood. He landed on his back, knocking the wind from his lungs and hurting his broken ribs. Gasping though completely beyond the pain, he kissed me over and over.
"Sometimes," he said, "you scare me half to death."
I smiled at him, kissed his lips then let him up. He stood, brushed himself off with only the slightest grimace and gave Starch a quick high five. Unlike most of the people on the street- who am I kidding? n.o.body was going inside except usawe went inside our hotel room.
The news gave us a vague report of a downed aircraft that caused the fire. The news reporter stated a helicopter was on its way to give an overheard view, but I knew this wasn't true, not if the gov had their say, anyway. If they had their say, no one would ever know what went up in flames out there. No one would know the truth except for the people that were there.
I turned off the television.
Starch was already asleep, dozing off in a chair with his legs hooked over the arm. Philip was studying a map and planning out the way to our next destination. Jonas was lying on one of the beds, his head pillowed on an arm. He was awake, though resting his eyes, and I remembered he wanted to tell me something.
I waited patiently, lying on the bed and facing him. I didn't pry.
He opened his eyes and spoke only when he was ready, and I know it was hard for him to tell me.
"I know what they did to Christian," he said finally.
It was the last thing I expected and, since of course I hadn't pried beforehand, I was too stunned to speak.
"He came to get me out," Jonas said. "Somehow he knew they had me. But they caught him. Christian isn't you, love. He can't hide himself from prying eyes. I didn't see him, but I sure as h.e.l.l heard him. You see, when they threatened me, they showed me a certain room with a certain machine. A machine they swore they would use on me if I refused to talk." He swallowed hard. "That thing looked a lot like the electric chair. You know? Except there were attachments for your head hooked up to all kinds of machinery. n.o.body had to explain it to me. It was what they used to erase your mind." He swallowed again. "I heard Christian screaming. I heard him calling your name." He shuddered and I touched his shoulder. I thought he was going to say more, but he was silent.
I didn't want to pry, and didn't want him to remember anymore. The fact that he escaped Christian's fate was both wonderful and terrible. Enough had been done to him without the erasing of his memories. Thank the G.o.ds Christian wasn't in that place when Starch blew it sky high. He was safe in a mental hospital back in Ohio. Jonas knew what my father had become. What they caused him to become.
Slowly, the truth of Christian's mind came to me. He sent me to S-4 knowing Jonas was there. He'd known Jonas was imprisoned there because he himself went to try and rescue him. How he'd known was beyond me, but he kept the location, that little bit of information in his mind despite the torturous machine that took everything else. My father was a powerful human being, and sadly I now knew that well.
"I'm really sorry, Chris," Jonas said, breaking my train of thought.
"About what?" I asked him.
"I wasn't able to save him," he told me.
Shocked, I couldn't speak.
Jonas only looked me in the eyes. He was seriously sorry for having caused me pain, for being unable to rescue my father. It wasn't his fault. I realized then what he was doing; he was taking after me. Had I laughed like I wanted to, I probably would have sounded completely hysterical.
Instead of hysteria, I said quietly, "Don't."
"'Don't what?"
"Be like me," I told him, slowly shaking my head. When he raised his brow ridges, I continued. "Don't feel guilty for something you could not stop, something you did not cause. Jonas, there was no way to save him. Christian led me to you."
"They tortured him, Chris," Jonas said. "I could hear it all."
"What would you have done?" I asked. "Bent the bars of your cell? Bribed a guard into letting you go? And what would you have done when you were free, huh? Fight off a hundred heavily armed soldiers by yourself?"
"If that's what it took, yeah," he said.
"You need to stop hanging around me," I said with the barest of smiles. I ran my finger along the line of his jaw once more, feeling the strong bone and able to easily see the hairline fracture hidden beneath his scaled skin. I found myself going down the same road, hating myself for what had been done to Jonas. To end the conversation and to save myself from depression, I said, "You need to sleep."
"I'm fine," he said.
"You know," I began, thinking back, "after I lost you in New Mexico, "I walked all the way back to LA."
He opened his mouth to speak, but I held up my hand so I could finish.
"When I got to Philip's house, I pa.s.sed out on the porch. I slept for almost three days." I sighed and said, "I was sick, love. I spent three days out cold because I allowed myself to get sick. I punished myself for what I did at Cannon, for running away and leaving you behind."
"What would you have done?" Jonas asked.
I said nothing, only smiled broadly at him. When he saw what I had done, turned the tables around, Jonas gave me a big grin. "Now go to sleep," I said firmly. Jonas did as he was told. He closed his eyes, and I helped him drift off to sleep. I went to sit by Philip and help him decide what roads to take to go back to Cannon AFB one final time.
Chapter Fifty-Seven.
Before we got to Cannon, we had a little encounter with a couple of schmoes I think is worth mentioning. Heading into New Mexico, we stopped at a border town called Gallop, which is a bit of a touristy town, though for reasons unknown to me. I can't figure out why anyone would want to stop here and be touristy. We stopped only for a bite to eat after having driven half the night. It was only noon, not the usual time for visiting a bar, but we ended up stopped at a bar that sold food and had a couple of pool tables. So I decided it was about time I showed off my other talent; my talent with a cue.
Inside the bar, we picked the table closest to the large bay window with a good view of the street, though not much else. Starch got a pitcher of beer to share amongst the three guys-and yes we realized it was only noon-and I opted for a vodka cranberry. Philip took a sip or two off of Jonas's gla.s.s, but he wasn't really much of a drinker, and he was our designated driver. Jonas, since he wasn't feeling well, had no more than the one gla.s.s. Starch finished off most of the rest of the pitcher. Me, on the other hand, I'm a booze hound when I put my mind to it. That's probably part of what got us into trouble.
We'd been there about half an hour, ate some mediocre barroom sandwiches and were working on finis.h.i.+ng off drinks when two young men walked in. They were in their early thirties, and one carried a gun on his hip. It took me only a second to find out one of these guys was the sheriff's son, and the other one was one of his buddies. It took me another second more to discover we played at their usual table.
Now, I'm not one to brag, but I am great at pool, and pretty much nothing else. One of the few useful talents I learned at the orphanage was how to shoot reverse English, among other trick shots. I was using this to beat the c.r.a.p out of my friends. I just defeated Philip for the second time in a row. Starch finished off the pitcher of beer and downed a shot of tequila. Jonas perched on a barstool with his booted feet up on the bar table. His eyes were closed as he was still feverish and not feeling quite himself. I was on my third vodka cran-an easy feat for a drinker like me-when Dale, the son of the town sheriff tapped me on the shoulder.
"'Cuse me," he said when I turned around. "You guys are at our table."
I looked around the room, empty save for us, the bar crew and a couple of old dudes playing billiards in the corner. "Sorry?" I said, turning back to him.
"This is our spot, man" Dale said.
I raised an eyebrow. "First off, don't call me 'man.' And there are plenty of empty tables, man. Go play over there." I pointed, handed my cue over to Philip and went to rack up the b.a.l.l.s again.
Dale wasn't having it. He grabbed my shoulder and spun me around. Jonas was on his feet and in between us in an instant. Sick or not, Jonas was always quick.
"Get your hand off of her," Jonas growled, looking demonic and towering over everyone.
Now, we'd all had a bitawhat I should say is a whole h.e.l.l of a lotaof alcohol running through our veins, but Jonas would have done this had he been stone sober, which he pretty much was. Jonas none too gently removed Dale's hand from my shoulder and shoved the guy back. Jonas stood a good five inches taller than Dale.
"Who the h.e.l.l you think you are?" Dale asked, stepping right up into Jonas's face, his head craned back for a better look.
"She's my girl and n.o.body puts their hands on her," Jonas said matter-of-factly. "Now, you and your little friend go play on another table."
The bartender, a little old guy who looked like he'd been running the place since Caesar was in power (Julius, not Augustus) suddenly appeared and carefully pushed Jonas and Dale apart. "Now guys," he said, "I don't want any trouble in my bar. You wanna fight, take it outside." He hooked his thumb towards the front door for emphasis.
Jonas smiled his pointed grin to which all three men-Dale, his bud, and the BT, which is short for bartender, if you didn't catch that-took a step back. "Gladly," my love said, his illness suddenly forgotten. "Come on, a.s.shole."
I rarely hear Jonas cuss. I'm the foul mouth in our family, so I knew things were going downhill rapidly. It was stupid; we knew that. Quite a few things had been going down stupidly lately. Half of what we always do is stupid. We'd been drinking. Starch was already falling out of his chair in order to be the first outside to witness whatever fight was going to occur.
So anyway, Dale once more stepped up to Jonas, but this time it was to get a better look at his opponent. "What the h.e.l.l are you, anyway?" he asked. "Some kind of freak?"
Now Jonas hates the word "freak." He found the word degrading and none too truthful. Jonas isn't a freak. He's an anomaly. He's a genetic mutation, much like myself. Not a freak. He showed his disapproval of the usage of the word by bringing up his fist and slamming it against Dale's nose, splattering blood all down the guy's face.
"Outside!" the BT screamed, pointing his finger and snorting like a bull.
Jonas turned calmly and went out the door, followed by everyone else, myself included. I downed the last of my drink before leaving, thinking we probably wouldn't be allowed back in the place, which made me last outside.
Out in the bright suns.h.i.+ne, Dale paced a quick circle around Jonas, getting an even better look at Jonas's face and of the build of his body.
"Some kind of freak," Dale's buddy murmured. He was more afraid than anything because of Jonas's size. He went by the name of Walt, in case you were wondering, and he wasn't really all that bad of a guy. He just fell in with the wrong crowd. It seems once you fall in with the wrong crowd, you stick with it. That's what Walt was doing; sticking with it.
"You wanted a fight," Jonas said. His hands balled up at his sides. "You got one."
Sick or not, Jonas has strength. He swung with all the might contained in his body. Dale was on the ground in an instant, his lip broken and already swelling underneath the purplish bulb of his broken nose. Dale squirmed around in the dust of the dirt parking lot for a minute, making gurgling sounds before getting to his feet and rus.h.i.+ng Jonas.
Starch was egging Jonas on. Dale's bud yelled obscenities. I rolled my eyes, and Philip was suddenly holding Starch back.
Jonas and Dale grappled for a moment before Jonas picked him up and tossed him back down on the ground. Dale, bleeding and p.i.s.sed, got to his feet and instantly drew his gun. That was the end of the fight. For the two of them, anyway.
That's when I stepped in between them.
"Okay," I said, holding up my empty hands. "That's enough."
Dale growled at me, still holding the gun at eye level. When he leveled it down towards my heart, obviously intent on ridding his town of us, or at least me, once and for all, I walked up to him. I did a stupid thing, which, if you haven't noticed, I'm really good at doing. I put the palm of my hand over the muzzle of his gun.
Jonas, knowing what was in my heart and mind, said, "Chris, don't do this."
"Why not?" I stared at the sheriff's son. "It'll only hurt for a second." To Dale, I said, "You have no idea who you're dealing with."
"I'll shoot you," Dale said. "And I won't think twice."
Walt, the bud came up and put his hand on Dale's shoulder. "Dude, they aren't worth it."
"f.u.c.king a.s.sholes," Dale muttered. "They are worth it. That freak is worth all the rounds in my gun."
"Dale," Walt said, but his friend was not going to let up.
Nor was I going to let him.