06 - Siren Song (46 page)

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Authors: Jamie Duncan,Holly Scott - (ebook by Undead)

BOOK: 06 - Siren Song
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No matter how hard he tried, Daniel wasn’t able to look at his reflection.

He washed his hands without casting his eyes up to the mirror over the sink,
because he was afraid of what might be there, or might be missing. He knew it
was irrational in the extreme, but that made no difference at all.

There was no one to tell, no one who might understand. At least, no one on
whom he wanted to inflict the pain of remembering what being taken as a host was
like. Sam had endured Jolinar’s memories for so long now that he was sure she
could happily live the rest of her life without ever thinking of Jolinar again.
Jack… well, he was a closed book on the subject of blending. It had happened
to him twice now, and he’d never wanted to talk about any aspect of it. Daniel
felt awkward, knowing they shared that horror and couldn’t speak of it. That
left Dr. MacKenzie, the program shrink, and Daniel had nothing to say to him.
Some things needed to be dealt with privately.

He gripped the edges of the sink, overcome with a feeling of vertigo so
strong he could barely stand upright.

His throat was still sore. When he thought about why, nausea built in the pit
of his stomach and bile welled up, ready to spill over. With an effort, he
controlled his retching until the urge to vomit had passed. He splashed water on
his face, cool enough to take the sting of sweat away, and toweled off slowly.
Eventually, he was going to have to get some sleep, but not yet. There was work
to do; his sketches of the glyphs from Atropos were scattered across the desk
and worktables of his office. He could make the work last all night, and many
nights to come.

By the time he’d wandered back down the deserted corridor—even the diehard
workaholics were home by two in the morning—Jack was sitting in Daniel’s
office, swiveling slowly around in Daniel’s desk chair and stopping once each
revolution to glance at the sketches. He looked up when Daniel came in and
nodded to him.

“Hey.”

“Hey,” Daniel replied, gathering up the piles of sketches as he crossed the
office.

“It’s 0230,” Jack said, watching him.

“Yep.” Daniel kept his eyes on his own hands. “Which begs the question: why
are you still here?”

“Mission report’s due at 0800,” Jack said. “They don’t write themselves, you
know.”

“Believe me, I know.” He’d finished up his own frustratingly vague report
around midnight. Once in a while, Daniel had secretly thought that if Jack could
outsource writing all his own reports, he’d probably do it in a heartbeat. It
would have saved Jack from many late nights hunched over a keyboard,
procrastinating by interrupting various members of his team who were trying to
write their own late reports.

Daniel went to the desk and began straightening up the messy stacks of paper
and sketches. Stray pieces fluttered from the pile. Jack caught one crinkled bit
before it hit the ground. “I would’ve thought you’d be sick of staring at
these,” Jack said, turning the paper right side up, then upside down again,
before handing it back to Daniel.

“I wanted to draw out as many of the glyphs as I could,” Daniel said. “Before
1 forget it all.”

“Sometimes forgetting’s not a bad thing,” Jack said. He fished a couple of
pencils out of Daniel’s desk drawer and began toying with them.

“There’s not that much left to forget,” Daniel said. He set down his stack of
sketches, then leaned back against the counter and folded his arms over his
chest. “I don’t remember any of the things I was trying to pry out of Sebek.
Most of the trip down into the library is fuzzy, too. It’s like… it’s like I
can almost get to it. But not quite.” He stared at the naked fluorescent lights
overhead for a moment. “It feels like it did when I first descended. There are
pieces missing, and I can’t reach them. I don’t know where to find them.”

“Then stop looking.” Tap, tap. Jack rapped the pencils together in an uneven
rhythm.

Daniel shook his head. “That’s fine for you. But I hate this… this…” He
held a hand up to his head and made a hooking motion. “These gaps in my brain.”

“Listen, Daniel. Some things aren’t meant to be remembered.” The pencils
stilled. “Shifu knew it. Oma must’ve known it. Who really wants to know what a
snake thinks?” The grimace of disgust on Jack’s face said it all. He was
perfectly content to leave some things buried as far down in his subconscious as
they could be shoved, and that was fine for him, but the desire to access
knowledge—Sebek’s knowledge, the library, even his own ascended memories—was a compulsion for Daniel. Jack didn’t understand.

Compulsion.
The thought sent a shiver of memory down Daniel’s spine. That
was one thing he wouldn’t mind forgetting, but he didn’t have the choice of
which memories he could touch and examine and which were hidden from him now. He
couldn’t articulate any of this to Jack, though, so he picked up one of his
sketches and traced the figure with his finger. “I’ve been comparing this to the
rongo rongo
on Easter Island. Looking for connections. Patterns. Maybe
there are remnants of that technology somewhere else. It could be important, if
we found it and learned to use it.”

“Maybe you’ll find something,” The way Jack said it suggested other unspoken
words behind it:
There’s nothing there, Daniel. Forget it.

For a moment, Daniel’s finger continued around the curving edges of the small
figure, following a cold trail. Around and around, slower, and then he stopped.
“Maybe.”

“Memory is tricky.” Jack dropped the pencils on the desk and stood up. Hands
shoved in his pockets, he said, “The way I see it, it’s a good thing you have
those gaps.”

Daniel met Jack’s eyes. They’d known each other for a long time; Jack didn’t
need to spell it out. The knowledge he was missing was what could have been
acquired and used by the thing in that library—worst case, he could have been
the instrument to harm or kill millions. A shiver gathered at the base of his
spine, curving through him. He took a deep breath, let it out, and the chill in
his skin dissipated.

Although Daniel hadn’t said anything, Jack nodded, as if in response to his
unspoken agreement. “Go home, Daniel. Get some sleep.”

“Jack.” Daniel’s voice stopped Jack in the doorway. The harsh light sharpened
the lines of fatigue on Jack’s face. “Are you able to forget?”

“Forget what?” Jack smiled briefly at Daniel as he rounded the corner and
headed home. Which, Daniel had to admit, sounded like a good idea. He was ready
for some uninterrupted sleep. There were mirrors everywhere in his new house,
but he could avoid those until he was ready to recognize himself in them. Maybe
it wouldn’t take as long as he’d feared.

 

 

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