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Chapter Twenty-Eight

Trish

 

N
ew Washington is nearby—she can sense it.

And the red-haired Changeling has been relentless, barely giving Trish a moment’s peace, always plotting and scheming.

Trish isn’t convinced they’re doing the right thing. Killing the president? Killing the Reaper? What will those acts accomplish except to further fan the flames of war? Something in the back of her mind—a memory, she thinks—wiggles its way to the front. And yet she can’t seem to grab onto it. What is her past trying to tell her?

Something important, she knows.

Something crucial to her ability to guide her children.

Something about…

Realization hits her so hard she stops gliding through the woods.

Her death.

Which death? she wonders. She’s had so many of them that they all start to blur together. Old age, in most of her lives. She may be able to repair her human body better than most, but it’s still a human body, susceptible to all the weaknesses that come along with flesh and bone and blood. Disease. Cancer. Time.

But there were accidents, too. Untimely deaths. She drowned in one life, as a child, before she even knew what she was. Seems she’s never been a very good swimmer. And yet, her last death is a mystery to her, shrouded in a black cloak, like a magician about to make his big reveal. Why can’t she remember it?

The red witch strides up to her once more, snapping her away from her thoughts. She pretends not to see her, hoping she’ll go away.

“Once the Claires—”

My children
, she corrects, almost automatically.

“Your
children
,” the witch says, “get my people inside and we’ll take care of the rest. We’ll take down the president and anyone who supports her. You and your children are not to come in after us. You’re too important to risk, even on this mission.”

But you’re expendable?
The insinuation surprises Trish. She’d never thought of the red Changeling as the martyr type.

“Yes,” she says. “I know you think I’m in this for some malicious reason. I may not be able to read minds, but you don’t hide yours particularly well. I know you don’t like me.”

Trish stays silent, wishing she could better control the tiny muscles in her human face.

“But I’m not the enemy. I want peace as much as you do. I know the Claires and Changelings have had our differences—I may not have countless lifetimes of memories, but I’ve read the ancient histories—but we’re on the same side in this battle. If you have any doubts, make them known now.”

Trish finally lets her gaze drift to the witch’s. The intensity in the beautiful woman’s sparkling green eyes surprises her. There’s no lie in them. She thinks she’s doing the right thing—that much is clear.

But the real question is whether she’s right.

We will help you breach New Washington’s defenses
, Trish says in her head. That is all she can promise at this point.

“Thank you,” the witch says. She pauses, looking away, and Trish can tell she’s trying to figure out how to say what she wants to say next. But she doesn’t have to. Trish’s powers are strengthening, and for a moment she can clearly see what the Changeling leader is struggling with.

I know my sister isn’t the priority
, Trish says. The witch’s eyes snap back to hers, as if shocked by how easily Trish could read her.
But I will try to save her if I can.

The witch runs a hand through her hair, combing it back. “One day you’ll realize you have to let her go. She is nothing to the greater cause.”

And one day you’ll see that you’re wrong
, Trish responds, moving quickly ahead. She doesn’t care to listen to her anymore.

Mostly because she wonders if she’s right about Laney.

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Laney

 

T
here’s not much food inside the mini-mart, which has been scavenged a dozen times over, but we find enough to ease the ache in our guts.

Then it’s back to the road, past the flowers that were once a wizard. I step on one of them—an unnaturally-purple rose tipped with red edges—and crush it under my shoe.

“Nice,” Bil says.

“Shove it up your—”

“Guys,” Rhett says, cutting off my retort. “Save it.”

Was that…
command
in his tone? “Yes, sir, general, sir,” I say, snapping off a salute.

“The crimson flocks are settling on the westward boughs,” Bil says.

Rhett and my heads snap toward Bil, our hands flying to our weapons. Between us, Hex lies down, as if to say, “Not this again.”

And Bil Nez laughs, his expression completely lucid, his brown eyes sparkling. “The looks on your faces…classic!”

“A-hole,” I mutter, my hand falling away from my Glock as I stomp away.

Behind me, Rhett and Bil argue. “You can’t do things like that,” Rhett says.

“I just did.”

“Bil…”

“Okay, okay, I was just trying to have a little fun. I hate being treated like this crazy person all the time.”

“You
are
a crazy person,” I say, not breaking stride or looking back.

“Thanks a lot,” Bil says.

“Look, Bil,” Rhett starts, always the peacemaker. “We could’ve killed you. I’m not exactly into taking chances these days, and Laney’s known for shooting before asking questions.” I consider shooting Rhett at that moment, but I decide that would only prove his point.

“You would kill me?” Bil asks incredulously.

“Only in self-defense,” Rhett says.

“Speak for yourself,” I mutter, but I don’t think they hear me.

“I see how it is,” Bil says. “I blackout and then I never wake up from it…because I’m dead. One strike and you’re out, is that it?”

“You’re already on strike four,” I say, loud enough that he can hear. “Strike one was when you took the mission to kill Rhett. Strike two was when you almost killed us. And strike three was when you ditched us and let us get taken captive.”

Bil doesn’t say anything to that, and frankly I don’t really give a crap.

Rhett, however, continues to play mediator, trying to make Bil feel better about things while hammering home the point that his issues are nothing to joke about. I do my best to ignore them, watching Hex as he acts like a normal dog, chasing butterflies, sniffing at something dead on the side of the road, pawing at the trunk of a tree and making it shrink down to the size of a flower. Well,
almost
like a normal dog.

I laugh at his antics as he pees the colors of the rainbow on the tiny tree. That one will never get old.

I’m distracted, not really paying attention. None of us are, Rhett still locked in conversation with Mr. Jekyll-and-Hyde.

The crack of the gunshot sounds like a car backfiring. Loud, but not that loud. Threatening, but not that threatening. In fact, it takes me until the second shot to realize we’re being fired at.

“Down!” I yell, throwing myself to the pavement. My eyes are wide, trained ahead, searching for any sign of movement from the shooter, who is thankfully not very good at human target practice. Hex comes over and licks my face as if the two gunshots are no big deal.

“See anything?” Rhett asks.

“Not yet,” I say, trying to see around Hex’s pink tongue.

A form comes into view.

“Got something,” I say.

Walking directly down the center of the road, the soldier seems unthreatened by us, even when I snap to my feet and point my Glock at his chest. He’s still too far away for me to possibly hit him, but still…aiming a gun at someone usually gets some kind of a reaction.

But this guy just keeps walking, his camo fatigues pristine in a world where everything’s supposed to be dirty. He doesn’t even raise his rifle, which he could easily use to cut me down. I should be the one running, but I just stand there, aiming my gun at his chest as he approaches. And I’m not even a little bit scared. Not in this world. A soldier with a gun seems like the least scary thing after when I’ve seen.

Rhett’s beside me a moment later, while Bil sort of hides behind us. Thanks for that. I guess I can check “Act as a human shield for a schizo witch hunter” off my bucket list.

When Rhett draws his sword, the soldier doesn’t bat an eye, as if he’s seen a million swords in his lifetime. Just keeps walking, until he’s close enough that I could hit him with my Glock.

“Stop right there,” Rhett says.

He keeps walking. Thirty feet away.

“I said stop,” Rhett says. “This girl hasn’t shot her gun in a while and she’s getting antsy.” Thanks. Put it all on me, I think. Of course, he’s right. This guy takes another few steps and I’m going to fill him up with magic bullets.

He keeps coming and my finger compresses the trigger the slightest bit, my heart racing. He stops at twenty feet and I release it, letting out a silent sigh. Shooting humans isn’t something I’d choose to do.

Witches on the other hand…

“You shot at us,” Rhett says.

“No I didn’t,” the soldier says.

“Yes. You did,” Rhett responds, and this conversation is beginning to sound like something out of an elementary school playground game:
I tagged you! No you didn’t! Yes I did!

“I was just warning you that I was there. That I was approaching you. If I wanted to shoot you, I would’ve.” The soldier’s clean-shaven face is completely relaxed, as if we’re just a bunch of normal people out walking their dogs, chatting about the weather. He looks like he’s in his late forties or early fifties, with plenty of life experience under his belt.

I believe him. But still. “Waving a white flag or something might’ve been more effective,” I say.

“I’m not surrendering to you,” the soldier says calmly.

“You should probably consider it, seeing that
you’re
the one in
my
sights.” I tighten my grip on the Glock.

The soldier laughs. Removes his cap, beneath which his hair is cut short, his eyes a dull gray. One of his cheeks has a long scar from the corner of his eye to his chin. He replaces the hat, his eyes lost in shadow once more.

“Not sure what’s so funny about you dying a horrifically painful death,” I say.

“You shoot, and the twenty-eight gunmen positioned in the trees around you will mow you down before you can even consider raising a white flag.”

“I call bullcrap,” Rhett says, but both of our eyes are already darting to the tree line.

There’s a rustle as branches move aside, whispering as if blown by the wind. Except there’s no wind.

Soldiers peek out at us, only their white eyes and black tips of their guns visible. Everything else, their painted faces and camo garb, blend in with the trees they’re perched in.

I slowly lower my gun, until it’s pointing at my own feet. Game. Over.

“What do you want?” I ask.

To my surprise, the response comes from behind me. From Bil Nez. “He wants to escort us into New Washington,” he says, pushing between us and striding forward.

I wait for the guns to erupt, for Bil to get cut down, but instead, something I never would’ve expected happens. The soldier breaks into a huge smile, extends his arm, and shakes Bil Nez’s hand.

“Welcome back, my friend,” he says.

Chapter Thirty

Rhett

 

“H
ow’d the mission go?” the soldier asks Bil.

I share a look with Laney. She’s as shocked as I am.

Bil leans in to the soldier’s ear and whispers something I can’t hear. The soldier’s head cocks to the side and his gaze settles on me. “That’s him?” he says.

Bil looks back, raising his eyebrows as if offering a silent apology, and says, “Yep. That’s him.”

I pray Laney’s gun will be quicker than the soldier’s, that she’ll be able to take him out before he blows my head off, that I’ll still get the chance to make Bil Nez pay for leading us right into the lion’s den.

But none of that happens. “Lieutenant Hemsworth, meet Rhett Carter,” Bil says. “He’s on our side.”

The lieutenant continues to stare me down. “I’ll be damned,” he says. “Everyone thought you were with the witches.” He extends a hand. “I never thought I’d say this, but good to meet you.”

I look at his hand, wondering whether this is some kind of a trick, but then figure I’m in no position to fight back anyway. I take it, pulling away sharply when his grip nearly crushes my fingers.

“This is Hex,” I say, motioning to my dog, who’s sniffing at Lieutenant Hemsworth’s black boots. “And this is my…friend, Laney.”

“That wasn’t awkward,” Laney says, giving me an eye-rolling look. “Glad I got introduced
after
the dog.” Hex barks as if to say,
Of course!

She ignores Hemsworth’s offered hand and says, “How do you know Bil Nez?” At least that’s the question she asks, but I can see in her glare that what she’s really asking is, “And why on earth would you refer to him as
your friend
?”

I can tell Bil’s gritting his teeth, his jaw moving slightly. The soldier glances from Laney to Bil and back again, and I wonder if he can feel the tension between them. “Bil’s been running key missions for the president for a while now. When he’s not outside the fence, we play cards. Although I wouldn’t advise playing Texas Hold ’em with him, he’s a real shark.”

Bil shrugs when Laney’s eyebrows go up. “If there’s anything we learned to do on the reservation, it was play cards,” he says.

“God,” Laney says, not trying to hide her sarcasm even a little bit.

“You got a problem with Bil?” the soldier asks. “’Cause if so, you got a problem with me, too.”

“No,” Laney says. “No problem at all.” Bil smiles at that.

“So the president will be rolling out the red carpet for Rhett, right?” Bil asks. “The full royal treatment.”

The soldier shows his teeth, but it’s not a smile. “Depends on whether she thinks he’s a spy,” he says. “Let’s go.”

There’s a whole lot of rustling and the scrape of boots on bark as the soldiers scramble out of the trees on either side.

 

~~~

 

Lieutenant Hemsworth likes to talk. A lot.

“When all the bad stuff went down,” Hemsworth says, “the armed forces were caught with their pants down, so to speak. Most of us were dead before we even had a chance to think about fighting back.

“I got lucky though. A few battalions were missed, almost skipped over, like the witches were the plague and we had lamb’s blood on our doors. These soldiers…” He motions to the twenty-eight men and women marching beside, behind and in front of us. “…they’re the future. They’re the ones keeping the last of the Americans safe.”

“That’s it?” I blurt out. “That’s all that’s left of the army?”

“I was being dramatic, son. We’re just the ones on the front lines, guarding the outskirts of New Washington. There are a few thousand others, too. A couple hundred Marines. Some wannabe Marines. Several dozen Rangers. And a couple rocket scientists. They control the real weapons.”

“The missiles,” Laney says.

“So you’ve seen their work, I guess,” Hemsworth says.

“You could say that,” she says, not giving away a thing.

“They’re the real saviors. Without them, the witches could pour right into New Washington and finish what they’ve started. But the witches ain’t the kamikaze type. They’re as interested in getting themselves blown up as an elephant wanting to cross paths with a mouse.” I’m not sure if that analogy makes any sense, but I keep quiet.

Laney, of course, doesn’t. “That’s a myth, you know. The whole elephants being scared of mice thing.”

Hemsworth looks at me and laughs. “Your girlfriend can be a real buzzkill sometimes,” he says.

“She’s not my—” A scathing look from Laney stops me. Wait. Is she my girlfriend? Does putting a label on a relationship even matter anymore?

“What happened to the president?” Laney asks, deftly moving the conversation away from our relationship.

“She’s a rock star,” Hemsworth says. “Without her, things would’ve fallen apart a long time ago. She made everything happen. Organizing the witch hunters. The missile strikes. Our strategy to retake the east coast. If we’re the parts, then she’s the glue holding it all together.”

“I meant the previous president,” Laney says.

“See what I mean?” Hemsworth says. “Buzzkill.” But before Laney can respond, he says, “President Bartlet didn’t make it past the first night. He was obviously a target and the witches knew exactly where he’d be.”

“Makes no sense,” Laney says.

“What doesn’t?” I say.

“Why they’d take out the President of the United States and not the second in command.”

“The vice president,” I say, chewing on her words. “They would’ve targeted her, too. Vice President Washington.” Laney’s got a point.

“They tried,” Hemsworth explains. “There was a glitch in her schedule. She was meant to be in one place but a last minute change landed her somewhere else. The screw-up saved her life.”

“And maybe all of humanity,” Bil says. “The VP stepped up and became president.”

“And ordered a hit on me,” Rhett says.

“She thought you’d switched sides,” Hemsworth says.

“I didn’t.”

“She really thought you did,” Bil offers.

“Maybe next time she should get her facts straight,” Laney says. Hex barks his agreement.

“You can tell her when you meet her,” Hemsworth says.

“Still, it seems like an awful lot of effort for just one guy,” I say. “I’m just a teenager.”

“A teenager who’s one of only three known Resistors,” Hemsworth says. “We can’t let you fall into the wrong hands.”

Things go quiet for a while after that, the quiet thump of three dozen sets of feet rattling the waning daylight. I stare straight ahead, wondering whether this has all been a huge mistake. The president could decide I’m still a threat. Could order me killed. In this new world, there are no trials, no need for evidence. Instinct and fear rule our decisions these days.

The world darkens around us and still we march on, the soldiers using flashlights to light the way. Something spindly and full of holes looms before us, like a giant thicket. A thicket that seems to extend indefinitely on each side and a hundred feet over our heads.

“Is that...?” I murmur

“The fence,” Bil says. “It goes around all of New Washington in a five mile radius. Well, almost all the way around. They’re still working to fill the last of the gaps.”

A fence? Really? That’s how they expect to keep the witches out?

As if sensing my doubts, Bil says, “It’s electrified and full of barbed wire, but most of us understand that it’s more a symbolic barrier than a real one. It’s the witch hunters, the army, and the missile threat that’s keeping the witches out.”

Makes sense. The witches I’ve seen could bust through a pathetic metal fence like it’s a wall made of toothpicks. And this isn’t even a good fence. As we get closer, I see that it’s been cobbled together from sections of fence scavenged from various sources. Most of it looks like the stuff that surrounds playgrounds, basketball courts, tennis courts—that sort of thing—but other parts are different, perhaps from batting cages and prisons. The sections are bound together haphazardly by metal wires and thick ropes. It’s the Frankenstein of fences.

And yet, as we pass through a gate that a couple of soldiers open for us, I feel safer. It’s a mental thing. When you’re trying to comfort and control thousands of people, a fence makes sense, no matter how ineffective.

We make our way across a flat wasteland that I’m pretty sure used to be office buildings and apartments which are now burned to the ground. Piles of debris—burnt wood and scorched bricks and black pipes and severed wires—is all that’s left of the structures that used to stand here. “Did the witches destroy all this?” I ask.

“No,” Hemsworth says. “We did.”

“What?” Laney says sharply. “Why would you destroy the city?”

“We needed a buffer zone,” he says. “If any of the magic-born get through the outer defenses, we’ll still have time to take them out before they make it to the civilians. So we burned a ring around the city, making it easier to perform recon. If we have to use our big guns, at least the collateral damage will be minimal.”

I don’t point out that it’s because they’ve already done enough collateral damage themselves. I don’t point it out because his logic kind of makes sense.

“This was all President Washington’s idea,” Bil says.

An hour of following a meandering path through the rubble and we reach the next checkpoint, a large iron gate between a gap in a fifteen-foot-high stone wall. It’s illuminated by a yellow spotlight high atop a pole. I wait for the gate to open, but it doesn’t.

Hemsworth turns to look at us. “Your weapons,” he says.

The side of my lip curls up. Nuh-uh. “Not a chance,” I say.

“Only if you want to lose a hand,” Laney adds.

“Until the president clears you to carry your weapons inside the city, we’ll have to requisition them,” Hemsworth says. “It’s either that, or we can march you right back outside the gate and you’re on your own.”

I look at Laney. She looks at me. I glance at Hex, giving her a sign. They can take our weapons, but we’ve still got Hex. Our secret weapon.

Laney seems to understand because she says, “We won’t be able to find Trish without their help,” as if that’s her reason for giving in to their demands.

“True,” I say, feeling a pang of guilt as I hand over my magged-up sword and other weapons. Laney does the same. I hope it’s not the last time we see them.

Bil Nez gets to keep his crossbow and rifle.

“What about him?” Laney asks. “If anyone’s dangerous, it’s him.”

Hemsworth raises an eyebrow. “The president trusts him,” he says. “And I thought you didn’t have a problem with him.”

Laney doesn’t respond, even when Bil winks at her.

The door opens with a monstrous groan.

The first face I see inside is a familiar one. A stern expression seen during many a debate, light pink lips drawn into a political smile, striking, bright-blue eyes. A tight, gray bun resting atop her head, making her appear a few years older than her years.

“Welcome to New Washington, Rhett Carter,” President Washington says.

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