Part 24 (1/2)

The village was in worse shape up close. Broken, reeking of human waste. The wave had definitely hit, stirring up the latrines, scattering material belongings. He could see where someone had tried to clean away debris, but it was an exercise in failure without a way to maintain basic sanitation. Cleaning up human filth was something he had become intimately acquainted with.

He and Jenny huddled in the undergrowth, at the edge of where the wave had crested. Less than fifty yards away, a man sat on a fallen tree, hacking at the trunk with a machete. He looked bored, but his head was bobbing to the pop music blaring through the forest. Not exactly subtle. No one was worried about being found.

Other men sat nearby, talking loudly, cleaning guns and knives. Bottles clinked. Perrin smelled meat roasting, and smoke-which curled upward and sideways, toward their hiding place. His eyes watered, and he stifled a cough.

”You see the woman?” Jenny asked.

”No,” Perrin murmured, just as the earth swayed. He grabbed her arm, holding on until the shaking stopped. Aftershock. All the laughter died for several long seconds, then started again with a roar, and several guns fired. The woman's voice broke into a startled, hysterical sob that did not quiet but only gained strength.

”Shut up,” Jenny muttered. ”Come on, lady.”

Just what Perrin had been thinking. He'd known a man in prison-a boy, really-who on his first night had sobbed in his cell. Loud, endless sobs. Perrin had wanted to gag him. Tears and misery were weaknesses, prey markers. You were prey until you proved otherwise. Everyone was. Something he had never understood until his exile.

Size and strength had given him enough time to learn the ropes. The boy was not so lucky. Perrin hadn't been close enough to stop the abuse that followed after that first night.

Jenny slithered away from him, crawling on her belly through the undergrowth. Perrin hissed at her, but she ignored him. The dog pawed at his thigh, whining, and he pushed the animal gently aside with a frustrated sigh.

He got down on his stomach and tried to follow Jenny. A whale pretending to be a goldfish. The dog licked the side of his face, then disappeared through the undergrowth after her.

Perrin watched its wagging tail-and her feet-and stopped worrying about being heard. The blasting music, combined with the woman's sobs, were both loud enough to drown out anything less than a bomb going off. He also suspected that the men were more than a little drunk.

Perrin found Jenny pressed flat to the ground between two trees, less than thirty yards from the encampment. He squeezed in close, so tight and hard he was practically on top of her-one leg hooked over hers, his arms resting on her back so that his hand clasped her shoulder. Better to keep her in one place, he thought-though having her pressed so close had other advantages.

Jenny didn't look at him. Her gaze was locked on the woman.

He saw her through the undergrowth. Fully clothed, which he found oddly comforting. Her long blond hair hung tangled around her face, which was bruised and smeared with mud. All of her was muddy, cut. She sat against a tree, unrestrained, hugging her knees to her chest and weeping.

Perrin looked past her at the men. He counted ten, but knew there were more, perhaps twice that number scattered around several fires, and deeper, in the woods. Some of them had to be sleeping. He could hear and see their dreams: cars and airplanes and children; glimpses of women who rolled naked in sand and sea, the singing sea, which buoyed silver fish that transformed into silent G.o.ds, buried in stars. . .

He shook himself, disturbed. Not all those dreams were human. Threads tugged on him from the sea. For some reason that made him want to look at Jenny. Her eyes were closed, brow furrowed in discomfort.

”What?” he breathed in her ear.

Jenny shook her head. ”I don't know. I heard something. I saw . . .”

She stopped. He said, ”You saw the sea, but it was twisted, like a dream.”

Her eyes flew open. ”How did you know?”

Perrin shook his head. They needed to talk. Soon. He had a feeling about what was between them, but it was not something he could explain here, now. It wasn't even anything that should exist. Although, as some humans would say, Whatever.

She was still waiting for an answer, staring at him with those piercing green eyes. He squeezed her shoulder and pointed with his chin toward the woman. Her sobs were quieting, but Jenny tensed beneath him as a man stood and stumbled drunkenly toward her.

He said something in slurred Indonesian. The woman squeezed shut her eyes, shaking her head. The other men laughed harder and shouted at their friend. He grinned at them, teetered to the woman, and grabbed her hair. She screamed. Jenny flinched. The man slapped her so hard, her head rocked to the side, slamming against the tree trunk.

The woman choked down a sob with a m.u.f.fled whimper.

”f.u.c.ker,” Jenny muttered. Perrin said nothing. He'd noticed another man, sitting deeper in the shadows, away from the others. Bronze skin, long hair. Tattoos covered his arms like claws. He wasn't laughing or smiling, but he was watching. His eyes were very dark, almost black.

Yes. Definitely these were the same men who had attacked the yacht. Of all the islands the sea witch could have dumped them on. . .

She does nothing without a reason.

An electronic hiss filled the air. A crackle. Perrin almost didn't hear it beneath the raging music, but all the men flinched-even the one who stood above the Frenchwoman. Someone turned the music off. Silence fell over Perrin like a hammer.

The tattooed man set aside his beer, reached down beside his legs, and seemed to fiddle with something. Perrin couldn't see what it was, but that electronic hiss filled the air again, broken by a man's voice.

Rough, coa.r.s.e, gruff. Vaguely familiar. Jenny stiffened.

”You were supposed to contact me,” said the man. ”Did you get the woman?”

The tone was angry. The mercenary did not seem bothered. He held the receiver to his mouth with preternatural calm, his dark eyes seeming to catch the firelight instead of reflect it. ”No. She escaped. There was a helicopter. Armed men, led by the red-haired woman you warned me about, the one with only one eye. We had to leave, or die.”

Jenny bowed her head, muttering something under her breath. Perrin wanted to do the same. He had been certain that helicopter meant danger. He had taken her away from her people instead. Stupid. So stupid.

The tattooed mercenary's English was slightly accented, but far more cultured than that of the man in the radio, who growled. ”Did she go with the f.u.c.kers?”

”She was gone before then, into the water with a man. She never surfaced.”

”What man?”

”Unknown. Big. Naked. Long silver hair. There was nothing on him in the files you sent.”

Silence. Long silence. ”Stay close to the radio. We'll be in contact.”

The mercenary began to reply, but the woman lurched forward, scrabbling in the leaves. Terrible hope in her eyes. She screamed something in French, a long stream of words that were desperate, raw.

”What's this?” asked the man on the radio. ”Who the h.e.l.l is that?”

For the first time, the tattooed man looked uncomfortable. ”She was here when I arrived. The men commandeered a yacht earlier this week. I needed to keep them happy.”

”I don't give a s.h.i.+t. Get rid of her. Now.”

Jenny rocked forward. Perrin held her down. She was strong, but he had a hundred pounds on her, all muscle. He clamped his hand over her mouth. The dog appeared beside him and whined.

The woman was still screaming in incomprehensible, broken French. The mercenary sighed, reached behind his back, and pulled out a gun. It was a new weapon, gleaming and clean, and looked nothing like the battered rifles the other men kept near.

The woman gasped, eyes widening. The mercenary aimed and pulled the trigger.

Half her head exploded.

Jenny cried out against Perrin's hand. Quiet, m.u.f.fled, choked down-but the music was gone, and all the men were so silent. Sounded louder than it should have.

Perrin held his breath as backs stiffened. Some turned, scanning the forest. So did the tattooed mercenary. Gun still out. Gaze sharp.

The dog whined again, loudly, and shot through the undergrowth toward the men. Wagging its tail. Bouncing, acting incredibly excited to see them. Making a lot of noise.

Everyone relaxed. But the mercenary stared at the forest a moment longer before he put away his gun. He picked up the receiver. ”It's done.”

No one answered. The call, apparently, was over.