Changeling (14 page)

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Authors: Kelly Meding

BOOK: Changeling
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“We’ll be where in twenty minutes?” Renee asked.

“Weatherfield,” he said. “Dr. Kinsey has something more to tell us about Jarvis and the person who may have killed him.”

“What?” Renee stalked toward him. She stopped an arm’s length away, apparently realizing Marco was not her enemy. “He was lying to you the first time you spoke?”

“Es posible,”
Marco replied. “Or he was carefully omitting details. We will not know until we speak with
el bastardo
.” He narrowed his eyes at Renee. “Are you coming with us?”

She hesitated. Shaking her head no, she said, “Someone needs to be with Gage. You guys go.”

I guzzled a few gulps of scorching coffee—thankful it didn’t seriously burn the inside of my mouth—plunked the mug down on the table, and followed Marco out, Ethan on my heels. Anger built with each step toward the front door; anger directed entirely at Dr. Abram Kinsey. For lying to us before, and for dragging us away from Teresa’s side when she needed us most.

We were at
a disadvantage during our second visit to Weatherfield. With Gage otherwise occupied, our lie detector was out. He’d either missed something during the first interview, or Kinsey was an accomplished liar who no longer distinguished reality from lies. We would get the truth from Kinsey if I had to force it from him with pliers.

He didn’t meet us in the lobby. A different desk guard pointed us toward the elevator and said we were expected in Dr. Kinsey’s office. We found it easily, the corridors as empty as the first visit. I was tempted to stop at the treatment ward, just to see if everyone was “in treatment” again. The entire building gave me the creeps.

Tempest banged his fist on the closed office door. A terse “Enter” gave us permission, and he yanked on the knob, maybe too forcefully. I walked in behind him, Onyx bringing up the rear. He hadn’t been with us the first time and was taking in the scenery, making his own observations.

Dr. Kinsey sat behind his desk, hands folded flat on top
of each other. His lab coat hung on a rack behind him, and he was dressed in a simple suit and tie. He indicated the two chairs with a sharp nod. Tempest and I sat down, mirroring the way Trance and Cipher had sat just twenty-four hours ago. Onyx stood behind my chair, hands squeezing the vinyl material.

“I hear you’ve had a change of heart, Doctor,” Tempest said, his voice dripping with ice and anger. “Care to tell us what you couldn’t elaborate on yesterday?”

Kinsey’s eyes narrowed, taking time to study each of us in turn before speaking directly to Tempest. “I will, of course,” he said. “But first, I want to convey my sincere condolences about Trance. I do hope she pulls through.”

Tempest’s jaw flexed, and I wondered if he was holding back a sarcastic response. My first words would have been along the lines of
You don’t know her and you don’t care about her, so shut the hell up, you patronizing ass.
Something in Kinsey’s tone kept me silent, and likely also kept Tempest on his best behavior. The icy façade Kinsey had displayed yesterday was gone, replaced by fatigue and concern. Genuine concern.

“Thank you,” Tempest ground out. We hadn’t heard back from Gage or Renee since leaving the house and could only hope the seizure was under control and Trance was stable again.

“I apologize for my manners yesterday.” Dr. Kinsey reached across his desk, toward a black box the size of a baseball. He touched a button and a gentle, whirring sound filled the room, quickly melting into the background. White noise.
“I was under direct orders from my superiors not to discuss Ronald Jarvis.”

“What changed their minds?”

“They haven’t,” Kinsey said. “They think you requested this interview, hence the white noise. I don’t want them to know what we’re about to discuss, and I couldn’t risk meeting you in public. They’re probably following me now, outside this building.”

“Why?” I asked, sitting up straighter in my chair. “What do you know about the person who killed Jarvis and at least three other people?”

“Three?” Dr. Kinsey paled, something I had never actually seen a human being do before. White as paper, just like that.

Tempest nodded slowly. “Our John Doe, a man named Arnold Stark, and when he’s finished with the body, Officer Ortega of the LAPD.”

Dr. Kinsey squeezed his eyes shut, pinched the bridge of his nose. “I never expected them to go this far, I swear I didn’t.”

“They?” we said in unison.

“Yes.” He pulled open a desk drawer, removed a sheet of photographic paper, and slid it across the desk. “They.”

I picked it up. It was a picture of three people, teenage boys by the looks of their clothing, standing in a cluster, as though mugging for the camera. But they couldn’t be, because they had no faces to mug. I brushed my finger over the image. Had their faces been smudged out? Altered in some way? No, certain features like the brow ridge and slight bumps where eyes, nose, and lips should be still existed.
Holes appeared where ears and a mouth should have been. No hair anywhere I could see.

“What is this?” Tempest asked.

“Your suspects,” Dr. Kinsey said.

“Is that some kind of joke? Those aren’t people, they’re mannequins.”

“I assure you, they are as real as you and I.”

“Why don’t they have faces?” I asked, not sure I wanted to know the answer.

His gaze flickered up to Onyx, and then back down to me. “Because they are Changelings, Ember. Hybrid Changelings without faces of their own.”

He said it as though it explained everything; instead, it left me mystified. I didn’t know what a Hybrid Changeling was, and judging from their silence, Tempest and Onyx didn’t, either.

“You’re going to have to explain what that means, Doctor,” Tempest said.

Dr. Kinsey eyed the white-noise box on his desk, and then began to speak. “When I was hired twenty-five years ago, it was for their Recombinant-DNA project. For decades, like several other companies at the time, they tried to dissect, understand, study, and re-create Meta powers. They failed, so they went another route with Recombinants. It took countless trials, but we were finally blessed with five healthy infants—two girls and three boys. This was twenty years ago.

“They were all Changelings, born with no physical features of their own. For some reason, the girls’ DNA was less
stable than the boys’. They were often sick, and they both died within days of each other at age five. But the boys were strong and capable, and they learned fast to use and control their powers.”

I listened with a strange mixture of shock, awe, revulsion, and fascination. I’d heard rumors of DNA experiments before, from all over the country. Never in my career as a journalist had anyone ever confirmed those rumors and admitted to participating in their creation. Scientists playing God, trying to re-create what nature had blessed us with, and the results were . . . well, loose. And murdering people.

“Tell us about their powers,” Tempest said.

“As Changelings, they have no identities of their own, but possess the ability to mimic others. With just a touch, they can perfectly reflect someone’s outward appearance, from height and weight to hair and eye color. Everything external is re-created to the last detail. They can pass as anyone, and as teenagers, often did, and got themselves into trouble.”

“Everything external,” I said, thinking of the skins. “What about other things, like voice? Could they mimic that?”

Dr. Kinsey’s face darkened, coloring with anger. “No, not with just a touch. We discovered this ability the hard way, I’m afraid. If they choose to, they can physically possess the body of any person they touch. Their own body becomes one with the host, but in that moment of possession, the host . . . well, two souls cannot coexist in one body, and the stronger of the two is always the Changeling. The possessor absorbs the memories, knowledge, and life experience of the host, down to voice patterns and food preferences. The host doesn’t die,
exactly, but he’s no longer an individual. The Changeling can exist this way indefinitely if he chooses to assimilate the host, rather than fight his personality.”

Onyx growled low in his throat. “So when the Changeling is finished with the host, he moves out and leaves an empty shell behind. They are the skins we have found.”

“Essentially, yes, I’m afraid you’re correct. It was a difficult ability to test, because there was no going back for the possessed victim, and we discontinued its practice very early. The boys were taught never to use that particular talent against another person.”

“Looks like someone forgot a lesson or two,” I said. “So, how many of them escaped, Dr. Kinsey? Just one, inside Ronald Jarvis?”

Kinsey shook his head. “No, all three are missing. It would take only one complete possession, that of Jarvis, to get them out, which is what our security cameras picked up. Him leaving with two of our janitors, who were later found tied up in a utility closet.”

Three Changelings, out there taking over bodies and killing people. The journalist in me was salivating at the story potential. The hero in me was just plain pissed. “So let me guess,” I said. “This breakout occurred the night Jarvis died? Once they were out, he wasn’t needed anymore?”

“Yes.”

This just kept getting worse and worse.

“You said they were Hybrid Changelings,” Tempest said. “What does the hybrid part mean?”

Dr. Kinsey pursed his lips, seeming to weigh his answer.
“Each of them also possesses a secondary ability, one that sets him apart from his brothers.”

“Which are what?”

“Ace possesses telekinesis. He can move objects with his thoughts. Joker is telepathic, which is fairly self-explanatory. He can listen in and place suggestions in your mind but only has two-way telepathy with his brothers. And King is fast. He can run upward of eighty miles an hour given an open space and lots of room. The ability also gives him a slightly denser muscle and skin mass, to protect him from wind pressure, so he has increased strength and endurance.”

Just like William.

The thought came unbidden and with it, the guilt that never completely went away.

“Ace, Joker, and King?” Tempest said.

“Yes, their sisters were Queen and Deuce. My Wild Cards.” He spoke so fondly of them, he could have been a doting father bragging about his child’s seventh-inning, game-winning home run.

“Why would they break out, Doctor?” Onyx asked. “If they’ve been here for twenty years, why leave now?”

“I have no answer for you,” Dr. Kinsey said. “Perhaps they no longer felt safe. Perhaps your reappearance made them feel unimportant to the world. Recombinants were meant to aid you, understand, and then replace you after the War took away your powers.”

Tempest snorted. “Well, running around killing people is not the right way to prove your worth.”

“I do not believe blind murder is their motive, Tempest.
Please understand, I worked with these boys their entire lives. They are not violent by nature, and they do not kill for sport.”

“Have they contacted you since they escaped?”

“Why would they?”

“You just said you raised them, Doctor. Why wouldn’t they? I can’t imagine they were prepared for living in the outside world without any sort of guidance.”

“They are more well equipped than you think.”

“Why would they want me dead?” I asked.

Dr. Kinsey blanched, stared. “What?”

“You know about yesterday’s shooting?”

“Of course.” His confusion concerned me.

“Arnold Stark was the one who pulled the trigger, aiming at me and hitting Trance instead,” I said, measuring his reaction with every word I spoke. So far, he was following, just not comprehending. “Stark was our third victim. He was possessed by one of your Changelings at the time of the attack.”

The man actually grew paler. His hands clutched into fists so tight his knuckles popped. “That’s impossible,” he whispered.

“Really?”

“Look, I’ve already told you more than is safe for me to say. How you extrapolate the data is up to you, but those boys are not murderers. Not in cold blood, not like you think. They are trying to survive, and we are trying to bring them home. I told you all of this so you might help me do so.”

“Not happening,” Tempest said. “If we catch them, they’re going to jail to face charges. They don’t get to run around killing
people in our city, and then go home like nothing happened, so you can forget that fantasy right now, Doctor.”

Dr. Kinsey’s eyes narrowed. “If you take anything I’ve just told you to the police, I will deny it wholly and under oath. This is a good-faith interview, Tempest, not a confession.”

Tempest glared. “My only concern is for the safety of the people left in this godforsaken, rotting city, Dr. Kinsey. Saving your job and your precious Recombinant project is nowhere on my list of priorities. Just so you know where we stand.”

“I am asking you, please—” Kinsey tried again.

“No.” Tempest stood up. “Unless you have some other information for us that will be useful in apprehending three suspects now wanted for murder, I think our interview is over.”

Dr. Kinsey also stood, nostrils flaring. “You’ll be able to tell them apart by their birthmarks,” he said. “They are absorbed by the host body, sort of like a fail-safe switch in case we lose one of them. It’s a brown mark, about the size of a quarter, located in the small of the back. It’s shaped like Australia.”

Of all the random shapes . . .

“Thank you, Doctor,” Tempest said. “We’ll be in touch.”

“I appreciate that.” He switched off the white noise and silence settled back over the room. “Good day.”

“Fat chance,” I muttered.

Twelve

Simon Hewitt

A
heated argument over what exactly to relay to Detectives Pascal and Forney filled the first ten minutes of our drive to the hospital. Oddly, Marco and I found ourselves pitted against Ethan, both of us in favor of telling them nothing—for now.

“We’re not saying keep them in the dark forever,” I said. I had scooted forward between the front seats. Marco drove, so I had to take point on our side. “But Dr. Kinsey took a calculated risk telling us what he did. If we go to Pascal, he’ll turn Weatherfield inside out looking for information on the Changelings.”

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