Authors: Rebekah Turner
âJosie.' Blake's voice holds a warning.
âYou're not the boss of me,' I say, channelling the six-year-old in me, then pull Cora out of the room and hustle us back to the dorms. Cora is trying to keep it together, but I know it's only a matter of time before she loses it. When we reach her room, the door safely shut behind us, Cora collapses on her bed and puts her head in her hands. âI'm in so much trouble.'
âCalm down.' I sit beside her on the bed. âTake deep breaths.'
Cora's shoulders shake as she starts crying. âYou don't understand. You don't know what I did.'
âWhat could have been so bad?' I ask gently. âWhy was Blake yelling at you?'
Cora manages to speak between sobs. âWe went into the slipstream, but I got disorientated and almost lost the other cadets.'
âBut you didn't, right?' I try to sound practical and calm while I pat her on the back. âYou pulled it together.'
âBlake found me.' Cora cries harder. âI don't know how it happened. I just can't concentrate when I'm there. My head hurts so much and I panic.'
A pang of sympathy echoes through me and I grasp her hand, holding it tight. This gesture breaks the floodgates and Cora throws herself on my shoulder, alternating between sobbing and confessing that Blake threatened to recommend her expulsion from Helios. By the time she's finished, Cora's voice is hoarse and the room has grown dark. I dim the lights and help her into bed. Her eyes are swollen and she looks dejected.
âHow about we just watch a movie tonight?' I suggest. âI know an old movie you might like about space marines fighting aliens. Lots of hot guys in uniform. Darsh could bring us snacks.'
âWhat about shopping for your dress?' Cora asks sleepily.
âI've got ages to find one,' I assure her. âI bet you've got something nice I could wear.'
Cora gives me a wan smile. Switching on the wide screen embedded into her wall, I load up a movie for us, then message Darsh on my slate, asking if he'll bring us snacks. Half an hour later, Cora's fast asleep and the space marines are inspecting the remains of a deserted colony shelter. There's a knock at the door and I open it to see Darsh holding a pizza box and a six pack of beer.
âEssential sustenance as commanded,' he announces, then stops, eyes dropping to Cora's still form. I take the pizza and put it on the tiny study desk, making shushing sounds.
âLet her sleep,' I say. âShe needs it.'
Darsh hands me the six pack and sits down on the floor beside the bed. âWhat happened?'
âShe made a mistake in her tutorial, and Blake Galloway happened.' I open a beer and pass it to him. I'm not much of a drinker, but these are cold and expensive looking, so I grab one for myself and settle on the ground with my back braced against the wall. We're quiet for a time, sipping beer, eating pizza and watching the movie with the volume low. Darsh offers me a second beer and I take it, knowing I don't have classes tomorrow morning.
âI did some searching for you.' Darsh pauses to glance at Cora, who is snoring gently from under her covers. âAbout your parents and their time here at Helios.'
I take a swig of beer, enjoying the smooth, cold liquid. The alcohol is helping me feel pretty damned relaxed and the idea that Blake wants to talk to me about something isn't sending my nerves into spasms of worry anymore.
âDid you find out anything about what they worked on?' I ask.
âMost of their projects were at a high level of security, so I couldn't get many details. But they all centred around the shadow biosphere and how to access it.'
âWhy would anyone, other than a slider, want to do that?' I ask.
âAre you serious?' Darsh says. âThere are corporations who would pay a fortune to have access to the shadow biosphere to study. After all, we're talking about the dimension responsible for creating talents.'
Debating one last slice of pizza, I ask, âDid you find out anything else?'
âMost of their work revolved around one project called the Ciliary Gate. I'm guessing it was a device of some sort, built to try and access the biosphere.' Darsh shrugs a bony shoulder. âI couldn't find out much beyond that. Just that the project got shut down and everything was shoved into one of the archive sub-levels under Central.'
âAre you sure?' I try not to sound frustrated. âCan you look again?'
âWhat exactly are you trying to find out, anyway?' Darsh asks.
âAnything and everything,' I say softly. âI want to know why my parents left. They had fantastic careers, with a bright future. I need to know why they bailed.'
Darsh sighs and opens another beer. âIf it's that important to you, I'll keep digging.'
Cora's still snoring softly by the time the movie finishes, so Darsh and I decide to leave. I've had three beers and my head spins when I stand. Darsh takes the empties and the pizza box with him and I wave off his offers to escort me back to my dorm.
Darsh looks unsure, then shrugs before heading down the corridor in the opposite direction. I've drunk enough that I'm feeling bold, so I decide to find out what Blake wanted to talk to me about. I also want to know if that dream was the result of out of control hormones, or an indication of something more serious.
I beckon my TP and it wobbles out, sluggish from the alcohol. I think of Blake, outline his face in my mind's eye, and my TP spreads out, searching. Exiting the residential building, I follow the pull of my talent towards a mystery destination as it hunts for Blake. Leaving the footpath, I meander along across the grass until I come across a low-set, featureless building with no windows. Approaching it, I realise my talents have led me to Blake on a direct vector, as if it's always known where he was. Shoving this uncomfortable thought aside, I slip inside the building. There's a wide corridor with rooms lining one side. A quick glance into one of the rooms reveals equipment half covered by tarps. Figuring I'm in some sort of utility area, I keep going, trusting my TP and wondering why Blake would be here.
Dull thumping sounds draw me to a room at the end of the corridor. The door is closed and I knock sharply on it. The thumping noise stops and the door jerks open. Blake wears low-slung cotton trousers and his naked torso is outlined by a soft light behind him. Beyond his shoulder, a punching bag swings beside a bed with crumpled linen.
âWhat?' he barks. When he recognises me, his face falls into a scowl. âHow did you find me?'
My ability to speak evaporates at the sight of his bare chest. The bright tattoos on his arms coil up around his pectorals; a snarling tiger sits left of his stomach. Opposite the tiger is a scroll of text, but I can't quite make out what it says. I swallow a few times and desperately try to kick-start my brain.
âYou wanted to talk to me?' I don't answer how I found him, thinking he probably wouldn't like the idea of my TP hunting him down.
Blake arches an eyebrow. He smells sweaty, but there's a hint of soap there as well. I try to shove the lingering memory of last night's dream from my thoughts, but this doesn't work as well as I'd like. The memory of him beneath me, the feel of his hands gripping my hips is almost as intoxicating as the beers.
He steps back, opening the door wider. âGet inside. Last thing I need is someone seeing you here and telling Eckhart about it.'
Without thinking too much about what I'm doing, I duck inside his room. Blake shuts the door behind me and begins to unravel well-worn bindings from around his knuckles. âI'd offer you a drink, but from the beer on your breath I'd say you've had enough.'
âI had one beer,' I lie. âAnd I'm not drunk.'
âNo.' One corner of Blake's mouth quirks up. âYou're a lone wolf, just like your uncle, right?'
âThat's right. And you wanted to see this particular lone wolf, so here I am.' I look around his room, wrinkling my nose. âWhy do you stay here? Why aren't you in the faculty residences?'
Blake's eyelids lower a fraction. âThat's my business.'
âFine.' I fold my arms and give him a haughty look. âHow about you tell me why you were being so awful to Cora? She's my friend so making her cry
is
my business.'
Blake taps his chin, pretending he's thinking about it. Then he shakes his head. âNope. That's not your business either. Cora is my student and my responsibility. Not yours.'
âYou were scaring her. That's not nice.'
âI'm not there to be nice, just to make sure she survives.' He takes a step towards me and I instinctively shift back. He tilts his head now, staring at me like I'm a curiosity. âWhy are you sticking up for Cora? You don't even know her.'
âI'm new here,' I say. âShe's one of the few people who've been nice to me.'
Blake gives a snort and throws his bindings in a basket by the door. âCora almost got lost on a slide. Do you have any idea how bad that is? She could have shot off the lightpath completely. Something that would see her instantly expelled, if she'd managed to survive.'
âRight. Sure. But are
you
going to get her in trouble?'
Anger ripples across Blake's face and I wonder if I've pushed him too far. My stomach rolls, reminding me it's full of pizza and it could barf on Blake in an emergency. I realise now might be a good time to leave. âI should go. This was a bad idea.'
My hands reach for the door, but then Blake grabs one of my wrists. He steps towards me as I manage to pull free from his grip, but I refuse to give ground. Heat radiates off him and his scent is disorientating, sending my body into some strange meltdown. My heart is in my throat, and I'm tingling all over. I start to regret my rashness, brought on by Darsh's fancy-pants beer. I try for a cross face, as if I wasn't wildly attracted to his sweaty man smell. Maybe I won't leave. Not just yet. Maybe I'll stay until Blake decides he needs a shower. And someone to wash his back.
âIs that the real reason you came to find me, so late in the night?' he murmurs. âTo see what I wanted to talk to you about?'
I sidestep around him. He lets me go, though his eyes follow me as I tactfully retreat across the room, pausing by his punching bag. âThat about sums it up. Then there was the whole defending Cora thing.'
âAnd if I say I will be recommending she be dropped from the cadet program?' Blake's voice is silky. I realise he's playing with me and wonder if this is what he does with those he can't scare: cranks the charm up. It's got rough edges, but it's definitely there, ready for deployment.
âThen I'd start calling you dirty names, for starters,' I say.
âWhat kind of dirty names?'
âThe worst kind.'
âTell me one.'
Realising I'm staring at his chest, I drag my eyes up and command my brain to focus. âI'll think some up. In the meantime, you know how unfair you're being, right?'
âUnfair?' The teasing expression drops from Blake's face and he picks up a shirt from the floor. âCora's fear is a liability.' The shirt goes on and I try to pretend I'm not disappointed. I half-heartedly smack the punching bag, setting it swinging.
âThen maybe she's not right for a leadership role,' I suggest. âWhy does she have to slide anyway, if she hates it so much?'
Blake looks at me like I've just lost half my brain cells. âBecause she's a slider. It's the reason Helios accepted her. If she can't perform a safe slide, what good is she to Helios? And that goes for everyone in the academy. The moment your talent is redundant in any way, you don't belong here.'
A snappy comeback is on the tip of my tongue when I realise he's talking about me. I press my fingertips against my chest. âAre you making some obscure reference about our situation? Being locked together?'
Blake holds up two fingers and counts them off. âFirstly, I didn't think I was being that obscure. Secondly, this isn't
our
situation. This is
your
situation.'
âWell, I didn't do it on purpose, did I,' I shoot back.
Blake's hand drops. âYou sure? I saw you watching me whenever I was in your uncle's store.'
âYou looked shifty. Of course I was watching you.' I shake my head. âLook, just tell me what you wanted to talk to me about and I'll go, okay?'
âI wanted to ask how you slept last night.' The question is odd and I immediately sense a trap. The memory of the dream roars back to me and a flush crawls up my neck.
âJust fine,' I say. My eyes skip around the room, anxious to avoid his gaze. But Blake is watching me, and when I glance at his face, a knowing look has entered his eye. A terrifying thought slams into me. We shared the dream. I try to swallow, but my mouth is parched and I want nothing more than to escape from this room.
âJosie?' He shifts in close again and this time I back up, my feet stumbling. I can sense his body heat, and my own sways towards him in response. âHad any strange dreams lately?'