Artemis Invaded (38 page)

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Authors: Jane Lindskold

BOOK: Artemis Invaded
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Now Pollux's name hung on the air. Castor's whip-thin body was tight, ready for a challenge. He had even stopped chewing.

Alexander took a deep breath. “I'm sorry. I didn't realize you were speaking to Pollux.”

That was when Julyan started to be afraid of Castor. Alexander backing down without even a sarcastic comment revealed everything Julyan needed to know. Maybe that deference was just because Castor had abilities none of the others shared, but Julyan didn't think that was the only reason. He had seen Alexander's eyes and recognized what he had seen reflected in them as bone-deep fear.

*   *   *

“We need to find a way to block our ears,” Bruin said softly. In a more normal tone he added, “Pass that yellow box, would you, Terrell?”

Terrell passed the box of cleaning compound, then lowered his head over the breastplate he was polishing. Barely moving his lips, he asked, “Adara and Kipper are well?”

Bruin grunted an affirmative, glanced over to where Julyan slouched on a bench against the wall, then called cheerily, “Julyan, could you give me a hand with this boot? I can't get the front clasp open.”

Julyan snorted. “You're not my teacher anymore, old man. Get one of the others to help you if your fingers are too weak.”

That gave them the excuse to cluster round and mutter over the ostensibly stubborn clasp.

“Adara's worked an agreement with Leto. Noninterference, if Honeychild understood correctly.”

Griffin nodded. He understood the complexities involved in current communications all too well. Adara had explained how she found explaining abstract concepts to Sand Shadow difficult. He had no idea how the puma then explained things to the bear. Did they talk in some language humans didn't share or was there additional need to find images that could be used to get ideas across? Griffin knew that Bruin's communication with Honeychild was much more like true speech, but the bear could only share what she herself understood.

“So, Leto won't give alarm,” Griffin said softly, reaching for a tool. “But it's no good them getting in here if Alexander can stop you three with a word.”

“And stop you, Griffin,” Terrell added, “with a threat against us. We need to find out how to plug our ears so Alexander can't turn us against you.”

Griffin nodded. He turned back to the table. Falkner had supplied them with a comprehensive cleaning kit. Among the materials within was a small container of a blue-grey putty-like material, meant for sealing gaps.

“This might work,” he said in a normal voice, for Julyan was beginning to look suspicious.

Bruin accepted the container, felt the contents, then pretended to apply it to the stubborn boot latch. “It might. Does it have any caustic properties? Falkner warned us not to damage the suits.”

Griffin pinched out the putty, rolled it between his fingers. “I don't think so, but let me test it first. Try this lubricant instead, only a tiny bit. Put it on the swab first.”

Bruin followed instructions, gave a satisfied grunt. “That did it.”

Griffin rolled a thin bracelet from the putty and slid it under his shirt cuff so that it would be in contact with his naked skin. He was grateful that he still wore Artemesian clothing, for the homespun material—although quite good for its type—was heavier than the synthetics he was used to and effectively hid his bangle.

They worked for an hour or so more. During that time, Griffin felt no rash or itching from the putty. True, skin within the ear was more delicate, but they wouldn't be wearing earplugs for days on end.

With satisfaction, he put the piece of armor he'd been cleaning on the table, tapped the putty tin, and said, “I think this will do.”

Bruin and Terrell made small noises of approval. Ring, who had been patiently working on a helmet, said nothing, but Griffin thought he saw his thick lips twitch in a smile.

“Take it, now,” Ring said. “The beginning of the ending comes.”

The other three stared at him blankly. Rarely was Ring so clear. Griffin reached for the small container of putty. Taking one of the dull plastic blades that were included in the kit, he cut the putty into three segments. Ring shook his head.

“Two. I do not need.”

“But,” Terrell saw Julyan looking over suspiciously, and continued, “I know you need it as much as I do.”

Julyan, thinking he was hearing a squabble over something in the kit, leaned back, bored.

Ring shook his head. “I am ready. Two is enough.”

Griffin smoothed the putty, then recut, adding in the bit from around his wrist. He popped out the segments and handed them to Terrell and Bruin. “Don't argue over trifles. Ring's the expert here.”

As if that had been a cue, there was a tapping of booted feet against the polished floor, then Alexander cut in, his voice silky smooth yet vibrating with barely controlled tension.

“That's right. Ring's the expert. Come with me, big man. My brother Castor wants a demonstration of how the spavek works before he'll agree to try one. The rest of you, assemble those jigsaws back into suits. It's possible the rest of you are going to get to play, too.”

Ring had risen obediently when Alexander ordered him. He stood, hands dangling limp at his sides, waiting for further direction. Alexander looked at him with poorly concealed scorn.

“Time to fly, Ring. Come along.”

Busily sorting, Griffin considered Ring's words. Did Alexander have control over Ring as he did over Bruin and Terrell? Surely he must. Ring had been with them when Alexander had triggered the dormant control sequence. He'd been right next to them, wearing the blue spavek.

The blue spavek … Griffin swallowed a surge of glee. He understood. Ring had the best control of the suits of any of them. He was also a proven precognate. Ring had known what was going to happen. He couldn't save the rest, but he had used the suit's abilities to deafen himself. After, Ring had acted as if Alexander controlled him, hiding his freedom. Griffin wondered what indignities Ring had suffered to hide this secret. He knew from Terrell's nightmares that Alexander had taken sordid liberties to prove his domination. Terrell was still struggling with his feeling of complicity, for one of the secret horrors of the control was that the one controlled felt happy to be of service no matter how embarrassing or revolting the commands.

Griffin ground his teeth. He would have hated anyone who played the sort of games Alexander did, but the fact that his own brother was the torturer made Griffin feel as if what Alexander did somehow was his fault. The fact that he'd had no real opportunity to warn the others, to protect them, did nothing to alleviate his irrational reaction. He knew the type of person Alexander was. He should have warned them, taken precautions, instead of standing there gaping because his big brothers had come to the rescue.

Griffin, Bruin, and Terrell were putting the last parts of the spaveks onto the gurneys when Siegfried strode in, looking distinctly grumpy.

“Griffin, we need this stuff in the test arena. After we did an initial test with the blue spavek, Falkner made the mistake of asking Ring which suit would be best for Castor. What he meant, of course, was which of the few we have ready and running. He forgot how damn literal Ring can be. Ring said the green one. Now Castor won't touch any of the others. Somehow he's gotten wind of the trouble you had and he's being very cautious. I'd strangle whoever told him if I knew.”

“Castor is a powerful telepath,” Griffin said mildly, “even if most of his ability shut down when Pollux died. It's likely he caught some eddy of what people have been thinking. Tensions have been running high.”

Siegfried nodded. “That's true enough. Alexander's tight as a bowstring. Falkner's not much better. He's reminds me of when we were kids and the grandfolks came back from a trip out-system and brought us huge boxes of some amazing candy. We started taking a nibble here and a nibble there. Before long, we were too overwhelmed to decide what to try next.”

Terrell chuckled softly. “And sick, too, I bet. I can see how this place would be like a candy box to Falkner. He honestly loves all this machinery.”

Siegfried grinned. “He does. He has since he was a baby in an incubator. The rest of us tried to pull our mobiles down, then throw the parts or stick them in our mouths. Mother claims that Falkner took his mobile apart, then tried to put it back together.”

“So,” Griffin said, wheeling his gurney in the direction of the test area, “with Falkner radiating kid in a candy box and Alexander vibrating his desire to have Castor ‘adopt' a suit as Pollux, I don't think anyone would have had to tell Castor precisely. He probably caught the apprehension. Probably someone tried to reassure him that what happened to me wouldn't happen to him.”

“That might even have been me,” Siegfried admitted. “I was very disappointed when Maxwell proved unable to use a suit. We had hopes for Seamus, since he's one of Maxwell's projects, and Julyan told Alexander that Seamus is telepathic. Seamus might have made contact with a suit. Might not … Impossible to tell. He just stood there, unmoving, even when Alexander commanded him. Seamus has been getting increasingly withdrawn. Maxwell used to be able to get through to him, but something's coming unhinged.”

Bruin spoke for the first time. “From what we understand about the lives of the children the Old One bred for his experiment, they lived in relative isolation in a small community. In a comparatively short time, Seamus has been exposed to things that would drive a more normal child to distraction—and he is hardly normal.”

“You make a good point,” Siegfried agreed. “Let's go. Nothing is going to be helped by waiting.”

*   *   *

Adara was pleased to learn that the captives had found a way to plug their ears. Honeychild could offer little in the way of details, but the sense of certainty was complete. Adara and Kipper's experiments in that area had been less successful. Beeswax had seemed a good possibility. Bruin had melted down some of the honeycomb that they had found earlier as a way to quickly separate the honey from the wax. First, Adara and Kipper had attempted to make earplugs from the wax Bruin had poured off but, even when they tried warming it by sitting on it or tucking it inside their shirts, it remained too hard to mold. They remelted a chunk, but when it was soft it was too hot and too sticky to put in their ears. When it cooled it became too hard to mold. That left working with some of the wax from an unheated honeycomb.

“There's an easy way to get the honey out,” Kipper offered, “if sort of yucky.”

He popped a chunk of the honeycomb into his mouth. His lips gently worked. After a few moments, he reached in and popped out the wax.

“It's still a little sticky,” he said, working it between his palms, “and crumbly, but body heat should keep it warm.”

He opened his palms to reveal a compact cylinder which he broke in two, then worked into the opening of each ear.

“Talk to me,” he said. “Let's find out if I can hear you.”

Adara turned away and said, “The bees dance on the water's edge.”

Kipper tilted his head. “Something about bees and water. I couldn't get the rest.”

“Not a complete seal then,” Adara said, “but I think we're on the right track.”

They separated more wax from the honey, experimenting until they each had a selection of fairly useful ear plugs.

“They don't block out all sound,” Adara said, “but hopefully they'll be enough to keep Alexander's command from getting through.”

Blocking their hearing presented problems of its own, since partial deafness reduced their ability to hear anyone coming up on them, as well as making it impossible to converse. The hand gestures used by hunters would be of some use, but these suffered from limited versatility.

“We're going to have to settle for carrying the plugs and putting them in when we think we need them,” Adara said.

“I'll practice until I can get them in really fast,” Kipper agreed. “From what I saw, Alexander can't get you with a single word. He's got a string of sounds to make.”

Despite their precautions, Adara remained uneasy. She wanted to ignore the dreams in which Artemis pleaded with her, dreams that intermingled deftly with nightmare. She found herself going into the Leto zone more often, considering camping there instead of where Artemis could reach her, but she knew that would be foolish—and cowardly. At this point, Leto apparently remained in control of herself. Would that independence last? Was Leto's inability to see much of the valley a permanent limitation or something left from when she'd been attacked and shut down? If the Dane brothers took command of Leto, any place within her zone might be easily monitored.

Sand Shadow was no help. The puma had a singular practicality where survival was concerned. She could not understand Adara's nervousness regarding letting Artemis in if doing so would enable Adara to resist Alexander—and what Alexander would do to her.

Adara's awareness of how vulnerable she would be was the hardest argument to resist. Adara had no illusions regarding her safety if she was a captive in Julyan's company. Then there was the Old One. She knew that he advocated rape and torture as well. Did she have any reason to suppose those he had allied with would believe any different?

From what Bruin had sent via Honeychild, Griffin was being controlled to some extent by threats of injury to the other three prisoners. How much more easily could all of them be controlled if they knew that disobedience meant Adara being used as a sex toy?

Adara knew what her choice must be. Even knowing this, some part of her wanted to scream that she wasn't being offered a choice. She stomped down that miserable impulse as unworthy. She had choices.

She could leave the others. Some would argue this was the best idea, because then she could recruit allies. Surely this was too big a job for just her, Kipper, and the two demiurges. Another option was trusting in the beeswax earplugs, her own capacity for stealth and secrecy, and Kipper's training. Or she could try to win Leto over to more active participation. Or she could wait, hoping that a better opportunity would be offered when their enemies' guard was down.

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