Part 28 (2/2)

Terminal Point K. M. Ruiz 65230K 2022-07-22

They were all looking at the owner of the Serca Syndicate, disbelief and horror in their eyes, on their faces, desperately hoping for an answer that would keep their world on an even keel.

Your inability to see things for what they really are is staggering, Lucas said into everyone's mind. Did you really think you could leave all the psions behind to die? Your entire dream was sh.o.r.ed up by my family, and we happen to be some of the strongest psions on this planet.

Lucas didn't bother to hold back, shoving his power into their static human minds without care. The fifteen judges were unable to handle the intrusion and several of the older ones collapsed.

If this was the point you wanted to make, it won't do you any good, Nathan said, a riot of power surging beyond his words.

Lucas readied his telekinesis for a teleport and felt his s.h.i.+elds almost buckle beneath Nathan's powerful telekinetic blow. He stumbled forward a few steps, balance thrown off by the strength of the attack. Lucas lifted his head, glaring at Nathan, hating to reveal even a shred of weakness before his father.

You never did learn to obey your betters, Nathan said. I blame Marcheline for that.

The combined telekinetic and telepathic strikes against Lucas's s.h.i.+elds were expected. He held up beneath the attack, mind still reaching for the teleport. Lucas could see his destination in his mind, had strength to get there, even through Nathan's power-except it was only enough to carry himself out of The Hague. If he was going to be at all ready to fight later on when his power would be needed, he couldn't fight for anyone's life save his own. Neither could he remain here much longer.

Lucas felt too-warm fingers touch his cheek, sliding down the curve of his jaw. Felt lips brush against his ear. ”Save my Strykers,” Ciari said, her voice soft. ”You owe me that.”

He owed her everything. They both knew it.

”Good-bye,” Lucas said.

He slammed his power against Nathan's defenses, putting every bit of strength into that one blow. It bought him seconds, enough time to teleport out of Nathan's reach, physically leaving Ciari behind. She briefly closed her eyes, feeling an echo of Lucas in her mind.

Nathan stared at the empty spot where his son once stood, trying to find some reason behind Lucas's actions.

”You can't be a psion,” Travis whispered, begging for it to not be true. ”Nathan-you can't.”

”He is,” Ciari said, gaze locked on Nathan's face. ”Every Serca has been. You've all wondered over the years about who controlled the rogue psions of the world and allowed them to thrive. The Warhounds have been the Sercas' private army since the beginning.”

”And for all the psions we saved at your behest and those who held your rank in the past, this is how you repay my family.” Nathan gave Ciari a faint, mocking bow. ”So glad to know where your loyalties lie.”

”With my people” was her answer. ”Always with them.”

”You'll certainly die with them.”

If the World Court thought they could beg, barter, or bargain their way out this time, they were in denial. Nathan heard their pleas, their willingness to do whatever he wanted, pay whatever he asked, if he would only spare them.

Like you spared all the psions you and your predecessors enslaved and killed? Nathan asked, his power fluctuating across the mental grid with deadly force. I have no use for most of the humans who belong to the Registry. This was planned over generations, over centuries. There is nothing you have to offer me, for I already own everything you thought you would keep.

For all the arrogance of the World Court, for all the pride that collective government body took in saving the human race, their discriminatory practices destroyed them in the end. Knowledge of what they had unknowingly harbored in the pristine halls of government since the end of the Border Wars-diseased psion DNA in a family that looked so human-left them reeling.

They died, one by one, minds burning out beneath the onslaught of a telepathic strike that had no boundaries. Human minds weren't capable of handling psionic interference. Nathan took them apart, unraveling their lives until nothing was left except empty minds and empty eyes; just bodies with hearts that beat, and then, just corpses.

Ciari watched them die and felt nothing. She raised her eyes to Nathan as he turned to look at her, neither of them bound anymore by the conventions of a life they were born into.

”My son should have saved you,” Nathan said as he skimmed his power over Ciari's fragile, broken mind. ”His loyalty has always been questionable.”

”He didn't come to say good-bye to you.”

Ciari smiled as Nathan's mind slid into hers, breaking through mental s.h.i.+elds tainted with insanity. Her smile was small, just the faint quirk of her mouth, but it held so much emotion. A lifetime of wanting, of hoping, brought Ciari to her knees, the schemes of a child laying waste to her memories as Nathan cut into her mind. He ripped apart the foundations of her s.h.i.+elds, baring her mind to the cacophony of the world's thoughts and emotions, but he hesitated when faced with the irrefutable presence of growing insanity. The hesitation lasted only a moment before Nathan continued his onslaught.

A second telepathic touch flowed through Ciari's thoughts-familiar, cool. She sucked in a quiet breath even as pain began to override her body. She thought she understood it now.

Close your eyes, Lucas said, telepathic fingers sliding over everything that she was, everything that she had lost, hiding all that she knew from Nathan. I'll take you away from here.

She did as he asked, his telepathy a barrier that Nathan couldn't cross, no matter how hard his father fought. Ciari's mind was a battlefield between a pair of Cla.s.s I triad psions, and she didn't have the capacity to survive it. Lucas knew that, had always known that. Somewhere in Ciari's mind, she knew it, too.

This isn't what Aisling promised me, Ciari said as she opened her eyes and looked around at the familiar, twisted landscape of her birth city, Buffalo a tangled mess of forgotten dreams and living nightmares spread out before her. The Hague and the Peace Palace seemed like a lifetime ago. She thought she could still feel the carpet beneath her cheek.

I know, Lucas said, standing by Ciari's side in the street he built in her mind.

Clouds were in the makes.h.i.+ft sky, and a breeze touched Ciari's skin, freezing her by centimeters. Somewhere in the distance, there was thunder, growing fainter with every breath she took.

We tried, Ciari said, tipping her head back to stare at the sky and the storm that was leaving her. That has to count for something, doesn't it?

Lucas touched his hand to hers, but she didn't feel the pressure. It does.

The air smelled wet, felt shock-edged with potential. Lucas's hand fell away. When Ciari turned to look at him, only emptiness was beside her, around her.

The rain, when it came, fell soft and clean down on a memory blowing through a world that was crumbling away.

Lucas let her go.

THIRTY-SEVEN.

SEPTEMBER 2379.

TORONTO, CANADA.

Matron picked them up, flying a familiar shuttle through the gray Russian sky to retrieve them from the rocky outpost. The scavenger took one look at where the three stood at the bottom of the cargo ramp, heavy, hard-backed metal carrying case resting between Threnody and Kerr, and shook her head.

”Just tell me it ain't gonna blow us out of the sky,” Matron said.

”So long as you don't roll the d.a.m.n shuttle, it'll be fine,” Novak said in a ragged voice. ”Tell me you got painkillers on this piece of junk.”

”Stop whining and go dose yourself.”

The hacker staggered up the cargo ramp, every step looking as if it hurt. He headed for the med-kit bolted to the deck near the front hatch. Matron watched him go with a frown on her face. ”What's wrong with him?”

”He fried half his brain getting us the bomb,” Kerr said as he reached down to grab the handle on his side of the carrying case. ”You should take him to Korman after you drop us off in Paris.”

Matron swore. ”G.o.dd.a.m.n that boy. Lucas is gonna kill all my scavengers and what the f.u.c.k am I supposed to do then?”

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