Praetorian Series [3] A Hunter and His Legion (72 page)

Read Praetorian Series [3] A Hunter and His Legion Online

Authors: Edward Crichton

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Alternate History, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Alternative History, #Time Travel

BOOK: Praetorian Series [3] A Hunter and His Legion
11.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There was only one man who could, and there was only one way to ensure I was no longer responsible for anyone but myself
.

I was going to find the red orb and take control
of it, thus ending the blue orb’s negative influence on me forever, but I was going to do it alone.  I wasn’t going to risk my friends ever again.  It wasn’t right.  It was my burden and mine alone.  Once I had both orbs I’d rejoin them and take everyone home, but not until the danger was gone.  Merlin had said my mind was stronger than most, so while it would affect me while I searched for the red orb, it was a risk I was willing to take… but alone.

I wasn’t about to
let Artie fall under the orb’s influence and never again would I place Helena or my friends at risk.

Without another though
t, I reached out and picked up the orb.

I nearly
blacked out the moment I made contact with it, but not out of fatigue, but from a readjustment to power.  Energy and strength surged through me, so much more potent and lasting then adrenaline alone, and I felt my mind sharpen and my muscles strengthen.  It was an intoxicating power, and now that it had recharged my weary bones, I was ready.

I turned sharply to Minicius.  “Prepare my horse and gather my gear and enough supplies to see me through
three weeks of travel.  Load another with as much as it can carry and meet me near the
stables.”

Minicius too seemed somehow focused and
bold now, and saluted.  “With haste, Legate!”

I nodded and watched him go.  I waited a moment, allowing wave after wave of thoughts
to coalesce from a disjointed web of errant impulses in my mind into a single cohesive plan that would see me through to the end of this.  Like a living computer, I felt my mind work with great speed and clarity, and I wasted no time before enacting step one.

I took a step forward, but paused, a brick in my left foot keeping me from moving.  I looked down
at it in confusion, but then my eyes drifted back to Wang’s aid station.  I saw nothing but the tent, although my mind knew what was in there.  I had to remember who I was doing this for.  I had to remember I was doing this for Helena.  I was doing this for the love we shared and the future we deserved.  Once I’d taken care of business, I’d allow myself the pleasure of no longer having any responsibilities and being there for her.

My foot lightened immediately, and I jogged forward, directing myself
toward Agrippina’s
praetorium
.  Two of her Praetorians stood as silent sentinels at the entrance, blocking my way.

“The empress in i
ndisposed at the moment, Legate,” one said.  “Please return later.”

“No thanks,” I said, and smas
hed the orb into the man’s head.  His partner acted swiftly, but wasn’t quick enough to stop me from swinging the orb into his face.  The strength and speed in which I’d acted only invigorated me, and I was entering the tent before they hit the ground.  I strode forward, and it wasn’t difficult to understand what the Praetorians had meant.

Agrippina stood in a tub of steaming water, bathing herself.  She noticed my arrival immediately, and of course made no move to cover herself.  I looked her up and down, something she may not have expected
me to do, because she narrowed her eyes at me.

“What are you doing here?”

I took a step forward.  “Get dressed.  We’re going to Rome.”

It was then that she noticed the blue orb in my
hand, and she grinned at me, her smile almost sinister.

“I knew all you needed was a little… push,” she said as she hopped from the tub and began the process of
drying herself off.  I wasn’t sure I understood what she meant, or perhaps my mind purposefully did not allow myself to understand, but it didn’t matter.

“Gather enough supplies to at least get us through Britain,” I suggested, “but pack light.  It’ll just be the two of us.”

She paused, still nude, and smiled at me.  “How romantic.”

I smiled, but then smothered it.  I wasn’t doing this for her.  I was doing this for Helena.  I had to remember that.  Agrippina was simply a means to an end.  An unwelcome but needed traveling companion for the task ahead.

Even so, I stood there watching until she worked the first layer of clothing over her head, and only then, turned and left her tent.

 

***

 

I cinched a strap over Felix’s rump, momentarily forgetting the wound he’d sustained there over a month ago.  He flinched as I tightened it, and I realized the area might still be a bit tender.

“Sorry, pal,” I said.  But then gave the strap another pull to ensure it was tight.  Felix bucked again, but settled quickly.  I gave him a pat on the n
eck and surveyed my supplies.  Almost everything seemed ready.

“Give me a few minu
tes and we’ll go,” I told him.

He didn’t respond for once and I frowned.  It wasn’t like him to not respond to things I told him.  I wondered if he was getting sick or maybe I really had hurt him more than I…

I heavy hand fell on my shoulder.  “Going somewhere, Hunter?”

I turned and found Archer standing behind me, his face a firestorm of fury.  He looked angrier than I’d ever seen him
before, but I plucked his hand from my shoulder and pushed past him.

“I’m doing this for your own good, Paul,” I said as I walked, heading back to our armory.

Romans were still streaming into the camp, returning wearily from the battle.  The whole fight seemed more or less mopped up by now, which was good.  It would allow Agrippina and I to slip out of here more easily but also keep people distracted enough not to notice.

“The fuck you are,” Archer responded, falling into step behind me.  “You’ve never cared about anyone other than yourself, Hunter, and you know it.  You’re doing this
for yourself!”

I whirled on him and slammed a finger into his chest.  “I lost my son!”  I yelled in his face, and I watched
him flinch.  “I’m not going to let that happen to anyone else.  Not even you, Archer.”

He
looked surprised.  “I… I didn’t know, Hunter.  I’m so sorry.  If I had…”

“How could you know?”  I asked rhetorically, turning again and continuing my journey.

“That shouldn’t change anything,” Archer said defiantly, catching up again.  “I’m sorry he’s gone, Jacob, but it wasn’t your fault and should only prove you need all the help you can get.”

“I don’t need your help,” I whispered just as I reached the armory.  I moved to go inside but then Archer put his hand on my shoulder again, stopping me.  I let him, knowing there was nothing he could do if I didn’t want him to do it.  “Get your fucking hand off of me, Archer.  I’m warning you.”

Tentatively, the hand fell away, and I stepped into the tent.  I found a large rucksack immediately, one as big a beach ball, and with a methodical mind and hand, started loading it with mission essential items.  Archer stepped into the tent behind me.

“At least let me come with you, Jacob.  You could use my help.”

“You’re only interested in making sure I don’t screw you over and leave you to rot here.”

“And you wouldn’t be?”  He accused.

“Of course I would,” I admitted.

I stepped to the right to see what limited supplies we had left and made sure to grab a set of NVGs and a few IR sticks before continuing down the line.  I continued picking up random pieces of gear: a few K-rations, a two person tent, sleep rolls,
a random flashbang grenade, emergency supplies, my SR-25 sniper rifle, extra ammunition, extra magazines, and the like.  I left my computer where it lay, figuring I’d never use it again, but picked up one of the spare M-4s lying there as well.

I manage
d all of this in under a minute and stood to leave, but Archer blocked my exit.  We stood nose to nose, eyes locked, unflinching.

“Get out of my way, Paul.  I’m warning you.”

He stood his ground defiantly, but eventually stepped aside and let me pass.  I left, but he was persistent.

“Don’t make me stop you, Jacob.  You’ve been through a lot
, I understand that.  Just think about what you’re doing to Helena.”

“I am thinking about Helena.”

I heard him run up behind me.  “No you’re not, you’re…”

H
e never finished.

When h
e put his hand on my shoulder again, I was done with his interference.  I whirled around and brought up a fist without thinking or hesitating.  It connected with his face and he tumbled backward, but I wasn’t finished.  I let fly again and hit him square between the eyes, pulled my fist back again and struck him, and then again, and again, over and over with knuckles as hard as steel.

I’d hit him seven times when he
finally collapsed and my eighth punch met nothing but air.  He fell in a heap, but to his credit, was still conscious, albeit barely.  I stared down at him, my chest heaving, wishing he’d give me a reason to keep going.  But he didn’t, and just sat there meekly like a frightened pussy cat, instead.

My upper lip pulled back in a snarl, but I was too focused
now for another soliloquy or forced monologue.  It was time to leave, not time for speeches.  I turned and walked back to Felix, seeing him with Agrippina seated atop a horse of her own, three other fully loaded ones at her side.  She watched me intently as I approached and I waved to her in greeting, but then the stubborn as fuck Archer put his hand on my shoulder again.

The orb was in my right cargo pocket, but that didn’t mean I couldn’t feel it is omnipresent power.  It was always there, like a trusted sidekick or loyal dog that would always have my back, always read
y and able to give me the nudge I needed.

In one fluid motion, I dropped the rucksack from my back and grabbed the large knife from my belt in a reverse grip.  I yanked it from its sheath and swung it up over my head as I spun around, forcing it downward hard in a stabbing motion as I completed my turn.  The knife point kissed flesh and pushed through like it was popping a balloon.  It went easily
, even as I felt the knife skip and slide off a bone, but that was all right because it still struck Archer right in his heart, just where I’d intended.

A seething, hate filled growl escaped my lips
as I thrust harder, feeling the blade sink to the hilt.  Deep in my cargo pocket, the orb burned against my leg, its scalding heat d fueling my rage.  As the blade came to a stop, unable to sink in any further, a feeling of sweet release swarmed through me.  It was almost erotic how much pleasure I took at the simple action of driving my knife into another man’s chest.

As the ecstasy
receded, I allowed myself a moment to look up from the hilt of my blade and into Archer’s eyes, hoping for additional pleasure when I saw them, but it was then that I realized they weren’t Archer’s eyes at all.  Another person had walked up behind me and placed a hand upon my shoulder in his place.  Someone else had been the victim of my knife.

Not Archer.

Recognition set it, and I stumbled backward, tripping over my bag and falling to the ground.  I back peddled on my hands and feet away from the bag and away from my friend, and I could do little more than watch as the man fell to his knees, his dark eyes filled with terror and a lack of understanding, same as mine.

He looked down at the knife implanted in his heart, knowing his time had finally run out.  After all his years, it had come to this, and he looked up at me with his weathered face, but his eyes landed on the bulge in my pocket fir
st.  Understanding set in and his eyes finally rose to meet my own, and his next words were made all the more unbearable because he was the only one in my company who would ever say them.

“Forgive… you, J…”

Vincent never finished as he fell to his side.

I stared in wide eyed horror as the closest thing I’d had to a mentor and a father died before me.  There was no hope for a last minute rescue from Wang
, who lay unconscious himself, and there were no Roman doctors to stabilize him, no magical vials to repair his wounds, and no more visions to change my interpretation of reality.

Vincent lay there
.

D
ead.

And I
’d killed him.

Hands surrounded my chest, and I curled into a ball on instinct, afraid of
repeating what I’d just done, but it was Agrippina who held onto me.  She wrapped me in a hug tightly and leaned her head in close.

“The fault is not your own
, Jacob,” she whispered into my ear.  “I was watching.  You thought it was Archer.  He deserved it, and Vincent should not have snuck up on you.  This is Archer’s fault, not yours.”

Her words were oddly soothing, convincing, powerful, and I found myself nodding and pulling myself together
in seconds.  She helped me to my feet and wrapped her arms around me and buried her head against my chest.  “It’ll be all right, Jacob.  You have nothing to blame yourself for.”

I found myself wrapping my arms around her as well, but before I could tighten them, she pulled out of our embrace and led me to my dropped
pack, mere feet from Vincent’s body.  I didn’t want to go, but she pulled me there, picked up my bag, and handed it to me

Other books

The Final Formula by Becca Andre
Mobley's Law, A Mobley Meadows Novel by Summers, Gerald Lane
OneManAdvantage by Kelly Jamieson
Ride the River (1983) by L'amour, Louis - Sackett's 05
What Remains_Reckoning by Kris Norris
Sex Beast by Bourgoin, Stéphane
Falling Bundle by Jace, Alex
B000FBJF64 EBOK by Marai, Sandor
Cultural Amnesia by Clive James
Lab Notes: a novel by Nelson, Gerrie