want to say the words:
with you to the
Strangers
.
“No. They’d just hurt him. He’ll be
happier here, with Wyatt. But don’t say
anything to him yet—he’ll just argue.”
To Remy’s surprise, Marley Huvane
was in the mayor’s office. She, too,
looked weary, and less put-together than
the other times Remy had seen her. Her
thick dark hair was pulled in a loose
ponytail and she was talking quietly to
Quent and Zoë when Vaughn walked in.
“Marley’s here because she has . . .
news.” The mayor’s voice was formal,
and he took his seat behind the desk after
a brief glance at the newcomer.
“My crystal has changed,” Marley
said. “It’s cracked.” She pulled the
neckline of her shirt away to reveal the
small blue stone, set in her skin just
beneath the collarbone.
Remy leaned forward to take a good
look. It was the size of a pinkie
fingernail or an old pencil eraser—and
looked like one too. Smooth and round,
it rose like a large translucent beauty
mark from the delicate skin surrounding
it. “It’s not the same as Lacey’s,” she
said. “Hers went gray and opaque.
Yours is still blue. But I can see the
crack running through the inside of it.”
And you’re still alive.
“It doesn’t glow anymore,” Quent
said. He was looking at Marley as if
trying to read her mind. “How do you
feel?”
She shrugged. “A little tired. But
that’s most likely related to everything
else that’s going on. Haven’t gotten much
sleep the last two nights.”
“Ana, do you have any idea what this
means?” Vaughn asked. “This alteration
of her crystal?” He didn’t come right out
and ask if it was a death sentence for
Marley, but he might as well have.
Ana had leaned forward, and Marley
allowed her to touch the small crystal.
“Usually when a crystal goes dark—
loses its glow—that means it’s lost its
life. It’s dead. Eventually, it goes gray
and opaque.” Her voice trailed off and
she glanced at Fence as he rubbed her
back. “I’ve not seen one cracked like
this before.”
“Does this mean she’s going to die?”
Quent demanded. He turned to look at
Elliott. “What happened with that
woman you tried to save for Ian Marck
—the one whose crystal died. What
happened then? Is this the same?”
“Her
situation
was
completely
different.” Elliott, too, had taken a turn
to examine the crystal. “Allie—that was
her name—her skin presented brittle and
black around the stone, and the infection,
or whatever it was, grew from there and
eventually took over her whole body.
From what Ian told me, the crystal had
been introduced and it wasn’t accepted.
Like a transplanted organ might be
rejected from a body. And the stone
itself was a sick, yellow color. I don’t
see any resemblance here to what
happened then.”
Remy was watching Vaughn, and his
fingers, curled on the desk, relaxed
slightly at this pronouncement. Still, he
said nothing.
“How long do you think I have?”
Marley asked. She was looking at Ana,
and, to Remy’s surprise, at her.
“Lacey came in close contact with
the crystal,” she told Marley. “And the
effect was immediate. She . . . expired
within five minutes. It’s been well over
twenty-four hours since you were near
the crystal.”
Marley nodded, her face grim but
accepting. “Well, I guess after living
more than eighty years, I should be ready
to go at any time.”
“We should all be ready to go at any
time,” Sage said quietly. She patted
Marley on the arm, then drew her close
in an embrace. “None of us ever know
which day will be our last.”
“On that happy note . . .” Fence said,
looking around. But he, too, was sober.
“Zoë had a thought,” Quent said. “If
we went out through the Waxnickis’
secret tunnel, we could come up behind
the Strangers and their Humvees—
ambush them while they’re distracted
from the front. It would at least give us
the chance to evacuate.”
“The entrance to the secret tunnel by
the Wendy’s sign is within view of
them,” Elliott said. “I checked. But using
one of the old city sewage tunnels,
where Jade’s favorite snakes live, we
can come out far enough out of sight, like
the evacuees are doing. It should work if
we can figure out how to ambush them.
Nice thinking, Zoë.”
“It’s worth a try,” Vaughn said. But
he didn’t seem optimistic.
Remy felt for him. When they first
met, she found him very attractive with
his rugged looks and easy flirtation. But
in the last thirty hours, he’d seemed to
age before her eyes. She knew he was
torn up inside about the decision facing
him and the city . . . and that was part of
the reason she’d made the choice she
had.
They mulled over the prospects of
what to use for the ambush and when to
do it—when Remy was surrendering
herself later tonight under cover of
twilight, or during the day, well before
the so-called witching hour. She didn’t
participate, and neither, she noticed, did
Wyatt.
Instead,
he
watched
the
proceedings
with
his
inscrutable
expression, casting an occasional glance
at her.
Someone knocked and Wyatt, in his
customary position, checked and then
opened the door to admit Cat. She’d
taken Dantès to the computer lab and
was only now returning—but with some
urgency.
“There’s something going on out
there,” she said, looking at Wyatt and
then Vaughn. “I heard someone shouting
‘Fire!’ And there was a lot of smoke
coming from near the kitchen.”
“I’ll go,” Elliott said, and Jade rose
to follow him. Fence was in their wake,
but Wyatt didn’t move.
“It’s a
fire
,” Cat said, looking at
Wyatt. “They might need you. What if
someone’s trapped?”
He gave a brief nod and glanced at
Remy, then the rest of the room. “I’d
better go check it out. Be back as soon
as I can.” He looked at Cat. “You going
to show us where?”
“Yeah,” she said, and slipped out the
door.
T
he dangerous blaze in the kitchen
turned out to be a small fire in a metal
wastepaper basket stuck in the corner
not too far from the restaurant area. Cat
seemed properly embarrassed about
raising the alarm, but Wyatt was too
distracted to be annoyed.
It was the perfect opportunity.
As soon as he was assured
everything was under control and no one
needed to be dragged from a fiery room,
Wyatt found what he needed and slipped
off to the computer lab on his own.
Confident that Remy was safely in the
custody of the others, he knew he had the
time to do what had to be done.
Up, up, up, down
. He pushed the
buttons and the old elevator doors slid
open. The spiral staircase was revealed
and down he went.
Dantès greeted him with a whine and
a lick, and Wyatt took the time to hug
him back, accepting a few good swipes
from a canine tongue. The dog, as
always, made him feel calm and at
home. Loved.
After a moment Wyatt stood. He
looked around and confirmed what
seemed obvious: no one was here. That
would make things so much easier.
He knew where the crystal was kept
—in the second room, stored in a file
cabinet. One of the drawers held the
piece of Jarrid stone that Quent and Zoë
had stolen. Another drawer contained
the Mother crystal, currently wrapped in
asbestos he’d removed from the semi-
truck cab’s brakes. He had no idea if the
asbestos did anything to contain the
crystal’s heat or otherwise mask it, but
he figured it was worth a try in case it
started to burn again. Not that it would
matter for much longer.
Placing the crystal on the surface of a
sturdy table, Wyatt unwrapped it. It sat
there, orange and glowing, unassuming
in its width and breadth. Hard to believe
it held so much power; it was hardly
larger than his thumbnail.
He hefted the sledgehammer in his
hand, looking down at the object that, if
destroyed, would save countless lives—
not only the people of Envy, but anyone
else who would ever get in the way of
the people who sought it.
Remy.
The memory of her face rose in his
mind. Strained and frightened, heavy
with knowledge. Acceptance.
He gritted his teeth. She wouldn’t
have agreed to do what he was about to
do, for the same reason that she’d
decided to give herself up to the
Strangers. Which was why he’d made
the choice.
She could make hers. He would make
his. Someone had to do it.
He lifted the sledgehammer. One
blow with its massive steel head and the
crystal would shatter, be ground to dust.
And it would all be over. Remy could be
free. Envy would be safe. The Strangers
destroyed.
His family—and all of the world—
would be avenged.
Maybe then he could find some
peace.
The hammer was heavy above his
head. Wyatt closed his eyes, thought of
Cath and Abby . . . everyone he’d ever
known, and those he knew now. David.
Dantès. Remy.
And he brought it down.
N
o sooner had Cat dragged Wyatt from
the meeting place than Remy looked at
Simon. “I . . . uh . . . left something up in
the room. Personal. Will you go with me
to get it?”
“I’ll get it,” Sage offered. “It’s
probably better if you stay hidden.
Especially with the deadline so close.”
She couldn’t help but look at the clock,
and Remy’s eyes followed.
Thirteen hours.
Or less, if Remy had her way.
“Oh, you wouldn’t be able to find it,”
Remy said, and gave Sage a look.
The redhead’s eyes widened in
understanding, and she frowned. Her
expression said,
Are you sure?
“Simon, do you mind?” Remy asked
again.
“Of
course
not.”
He
seemed
oblivious to the silent communication
between the two women, and stood.
Because of Simon’s background and the
fact that he was the security and
authority figure for Envy, Remy knew
she’d be well-protected.
Besides. They weren’t going far.
As soon as they got out of Vaughn’s
office, she turned to Simon and said,
“Take me to Ian Marck. I need to talk to
him.”
He paused, looking her over with
expressionless
brown
eyes.
“You
planned all that, didn’t you?”
“I had to. Take me to him, please?
Before Wyatt gets back.”
He didn’t look pleased, but took her
arm and led her off through a short
warren of hallways. They came to a
door and he drew a handgun from his
back waistband, then unlocked the door.
Remy went in and found Ian sitting on
a sofa in accommodations just as
comfortable as her own. He rose when
they came in, and she was gratified to
notice that Simon replaced the gun in his
waistband and took a seat near the door.
“Could we speak alone?” she said,
turning to Simon. His cool eyes went
from her to Ian and back, but he didn’t
argue. He simply stood, opened the
door, and disappeared into the hallway.
When the door closed behind him,
Remy turned back to Ian.
“To what do I owe this pleasure?” he
asked.
“I need you to tell me everything you
know about the Mother crystal. Why the
Strangers want it, what you know about