“We have the girl,” the Tsar said smugly.
Daedalus heart skipped a beat. “Are you sure?”
“She and her protector, the man with no face, along with a treacherous former Iron Guard, were caught trespassing in the Pripet Marshes. They are being held in a special facility near the capital.” He didn’t volunteer the name and location of the facility, of course, but Daedalus knew exactly which one it was, also of course. When they weren’t playing over chessmen, Daedalus was usually three or four moves ahead of the Ukrainian warlord.
Until now, that is.
What the fuck was the girl doing in the Ukraine? Had she lost her mind? Daedalus forced himself to set aside the irrelevant questions. He chose his next words very carefully. “You’ve got to be very cautious with her, mein Zar. Perhaps it might be best to terminate her.” Having Ms. Dark dead was better than giving Cushko a chance to take control over the Source and become the most powerful man on Earth, a position that should rightfully be Daedalus’.
The Iron Tsar shook his head. “Dead, she is of no use at all. And we subdued her easily enough. I doubt she will be much trouble now that she’s under our control.”
“So what do you plan to do with her?”
“Standard submission techniques. Psychological pressure first, to determine the best avenues of approach. After that, the usual methods of coercion until her will is broken. We are keeping her bodyguard alive, as there appears to be an emotional bond between them. My lady has taken a personal interest in the matter.”
Christ. Baba Yaga, the Tsar’s consort, was the craziest bitch Daedalus’d had the displeasure of knowing, which was saying a lot in a world full of crazy bitches. The gentler gender had gone to hell since they’d gotten the vote. On the other hand, there was a good chance Babs would kill Christine Dark before they could get anything useful out of her. It was a thin silver lining, but something to hope for.
Still, no sense in taking chances. Daedalus tried another gambit. “I’d advise you to wait until I can get there.”
The man in the iron helmet tilted his head to one side. “I fail to see what you can do that my own team of experts cannot. Of course, I will share any discoveries we make with you, just as you would have, had you managed to retain custody of the girl.” It was all bullshit, and they both knew it. They had established dozens of elaborate fail-safes designed to ensure cooperation between the two of them, and a dozen-and-a-half workarounds to ensure they would cheat each other at the first opportunity. Possession of the girl wasn’t just nine points of the law, it was the whole fucking ball of wax.
Daedalus smirked. “Come on, Cushko. You’re smart enough to figure I held a few things back.”
“Such as?”
“I learned a few more Words from the Lurker than I let on, and between them and a few tricks I got from Mr. Night, I am ninety percent sure I can give us – both of us – full access to the Source. Whatever plan you’ve got, assuming your experts aren’t lying to your face, doesn’t have more than, say, a sixty, sixty-five percent chance of success.”
“Geistesblitz is certain we have a seventy-five chance of success if we get the girl’s full compliance, seventy percent if we have to remove her brain and spinal tissue and work them into an automated device.”
“So even if your tame Kraut isn’t full of shit, there’s a better than one-in-four chance the whole thing blows up in your face. Very likely literally, which might well crack the Earth like an eggshell under a hammer, or at the very least turn your little kingdom and much of Eastern and Central Europe into a lava-filled crater. That’s worse odds than Russian roulette, pal. If we do it my way, we’ve got nine-to-one odds. Yeah, we’ll both have to learn how to share the spoils, but I figure the planet is big enough for the two of us. What do you say?”
“I say, how soon can you arrive here?”
Daedalus made some quick calculations. He’d planned for this sort of eventuality, but getting all the pieces into place would take a little time. “Seventy-two hours, give or take, not counting the seven-hour time differential.” He could be there in a day and a half, but he doubled the estimate, knowing how the Tsar’s mind worked.
“I am prepared to wait forty-eight hours before initiating direct subdual methods.”
Just as he’d expected. “All right,” he replied, sounding like he was making a painful concession. “I guess I can shoot for forty-eight hours, at the risk I’ll be found out.”
“If we succeed in this matter, that risk is irrelevant.”
“You’ve got a point, pal. See you in two days.”
“We will be eagerly waiting for you, my friend. Shall we start a new game?”
“Sure, why not.”
Chances were they’d never finish it. One way or another, the game that mattered was going to end in mate in two.
The only question was which king would fall.
Chapter Two
Face-Off
Kiev, Dominion of the Ukraine, March 26, 2013
They say you can get used to hanging, if you hang long enough.
Father Alex told me that one, back in the good old days, when my only worries were such things as not getting caught with the corpse of a serial killer in the trunk of my latest stolen car. The good old days, when Father Alex and my psychic pal Cassandra were alive and well.
A lot had changed over the last couple of weeks.
At the moment, I was hanging from my wrists in a high-tech dungeon, harsh neon lights illuminating an almost medical setting, except for the high-tech restraints, the big metal grill covering the drain in the center of the sloping tile floor, and the power tools that had few medical applications, but several uses when it came to slowly but surely taking somebody apart, piece by piece.
I was in one piece so far. The Ukrainian assholes had shackled me to a wall and left me to stew by myself. I guess they figured my imagination would do a good job of messing with my mind before they even got started on me.
They figured wrong. At the moment, the last thing I was thinking of was the upcoming torture sessions. Considering the circumstances, I was feeling rather chipper. Because of Christine.
I could still feel her presence in my head. The link we’d established hadn’t gone away. I even had some idea where she was. Two hundred, two hundred and fifty feet away, and two stories above me. Less than a football field’s length. Not very far at all, and if I had to pave every step of the way with the corpses of the assholes who’d taken her, I’d do it with a notional smile on my no-face.
So I hung out and waited for her to communicate with me, or for any sign they were hurting her, at which point I would break free even if I had to chew off my arms and legs to do so. For the time being, I didn’t feel any strong emotions coming from her, which surprised me. She should be terrified, but if she was, she was keeping a tight lid on it. I’d known plenty of tough guys who’d be streaming bodily secretions from every hole in their body just about now. My respect for her grew even more.
Time passed. I tuned out my surroundings and thought good thoughts.
Finally: <Mark?>
<Hey.>
<Hey. Listen, I think we’re safe from eavesdropping, more or less. Our link is in a very specific frequency, one most telepaths can’t access. I don’t think anybody who hasn’t shared a near-death experience and a full aura-meld with both of us can even sense it.>
<Good to know.> That gave us a pretty nice leg up on the assholes. <How are they treating you so far?>
A mental shrug, but underneath it was a bit of fear and humiliation. <Well, they untied me but kept a collar around my neck. It’s full of Outsider energy, so if I try to use any active powers I’ll get myself knocked out. Hurts like a mother, too. I know because I tried a couple of times.>
<You did? I didn’t feel any
of it.>
<That’s ‘cause I blocked you before I tried. I didn’t want to worry you.>
<Fuck.>
<Ouch! Okay, you need to block your emotions from me, Mark. That outburst of anger you just felt hurt. Like a lot. This connection is pretty intimate, so try to keep it down, all right?>
<So I have to hear about you being hurt, but I can’t get pissed off about it, because it will hurt you even more.> The universe had a nasty sense of humor.
<I know you can’t help feeling stuff, but you have to learn how to filter it out. Here, let me show you.>
What followed was one of the weirdest experiences of my life, or that week. It was as if she got behind the wheel of my brain and drove it for me for a while, and in the process she taught me how to build a wall of sorts around my emotions, so I could only let her hear and feel what I wanted her to. <Okay, I think I got it,> I told her.
<Good. So anyways, besides the collar, they had me change into this hospital gown. At least it’s one that laces off to one side rather than the back, so my butt isn’t hanging out, but that’s all I’m wearing. That sucks, but so far they haven’t done anything else. I’m in a plain white room, got a tiny toilet and a very thin mattress on the floor, and that’s about it. How about you?>
<About the same,> I lied, just to see if I could do it while using the emotion blocks.
<Okay,> was all she said, which meant I could lie to her through the mental link. It didn’t make me feel good at all, but I figured there was no point in her knowing I was hanging by my wrists, which was rather painful. I didn’t think I could pull the wool over her eyes if we were talking face to face, though. <So what happens next, Mark?>
<My guess is, they let us rot for a while. A few hours at least, maybe a day or two, unless they’re in a hurry. The wait, being alone in a room, is supposed to make us nervous, to let us feed our fears.>
<Okay, that makes sense. And then?>
Jesus H. Christ. I was going to have to share all my torture expertise with her. I wasn’t much of an expert, not really, since Cassandra had fed me most of the information I needed, but I’d had to do my share of forceful interrogations over the years, times when Cassandra’s visions weren’t clear enough and I’d had to do my own digging. Most people talked when offered the simple choice between talking and getting beaten to a pulp, but there’d been exceptions.
Exceptions like the pedophile from Hoboken. He hadn’t wanted to tell me where he’d stashed a six year old, and he’d held out for a good while, for reasons I hadn’t cared to delve into. I’d gotten pretty creative towards the end, and I’d found the kid, still alive. Then I’d come back and finished off the asshole. The promise of a quick death if I found the child had been the reason he’d finally given it up, after I’d shown him just how long I could make him last.
<Mark?>
Fuck. Okay, emotion block, do your thing. <Yeah. All right, I don’t know what these fuckers’ playbook is like, but everybody uses a similar playbook. They’ll probably try intimidation first. As it turns out, people handle pain better than you’d expect, so the smart players don’t start out with pain, unless they’re in a hurry. So they’ll show you stuff they can do to you, let your mind do their work for them. After they’ve intimidated you, they’ll try to make you do stuff, to establish dominance over you. When you refuse, and they’re going to push you until you refuse, they’ll hurt you. The goal is to break your spirit, to make you do whatever they tell you to.>
<Oh boy. Good thing I just went to the bathroom. Mark, I don’t know how I’m going to handle being hurt, hurt in cold blood, you know? I’ve been getting hurt a lot lately, but it’s all happened in the middle of fights, in the heat of the moment. When stuff is happening fast, you don’t have time to really think about it, you know? It’s different like this.>
I kept a tight lid on my emotions so I wouldn’t upset her more. <I know. It’s going to be bad, Christine. I’ll be with you every step of the way, all right? One thing is, we Neos can take a lot of punishment, so unless they’re complete fuckups, you’ll be able to heal from anything they do to you.> I didn’t know how I was going to handle being inside her head while she was being tortured, only that I was going to have to. <Also, they’ll probably try good cop, bad cop first. One of the interrogators will be sympathetic, maybe even nice to you. Watch out for him, he’s going to try to trick you into doing stuff.>
<Okay. I just thought of something else. When I was being kidnapped by the Mob, Cassandra took my mind to Dreamland, and I didn’t have to experience most of what was happening to me in the real world. Maybe I can do that with you?>
<That might work. We can try it if things get too bad.>
<Anyways, worrying about torture isn’t going to get us anywhere. We need to start thinking about escaping.>
<Now you’re talking, Armageddon Girl.>
<If we get out of here, you can call me whatever the frak you want; Armageddon Girl, Taylor Swift, whatever. So, the fact we can still communicate despite the disruptor restraints shows the disruptors aren’t perfect. I mean, they don’t completely cancel out our powers.>
<They canceled me out pretty fucking good in Chicago> I replied. One blast of that twisting black energy and every nerve in my body had exploded with agony; my strength had deserted me and I’d gone down for the count.
<I know, but I think it’s a function of our power bandwidths. The disruptors interfere with the flow of energy between us and the Source, sort of like blocking off a pipe. The wider the pipe is, the less effective the blockage is going to be.>
<So now that I’m a Type Three, I might be able to push past the pain and keep going, is that what you’re saying?>
<Yes. I mean, when they took me down, there were like twenty of them, shooting disruptors at me, all at the same time. I think I could have handled a smaller number, at least long enough to fight back, or run, or something.>
Interesting. Very, very interesting.
<How many disruptors did it take to bring you down, Mark? Trying to establish a baseline.>
<Zero, actually. Baba Yaga sort of mauled me half to death.>
<Yikes.>
<I was actually kicking her ass for a while, but she has this trick where she fills an area with pitch darkness. Father Alex helped me see her, until…> Until they killed him. Father Alex had traveled a long way just for the honor of being killed in his old country.
Some of what I felt seeped through, because I caught a burst of sorrow from her. <Oh. I’m so sorry, Mark.>
<I know. We’ll talk about it later, when we’ve left beautiful Ukraine in the rearview mirror. Anyways, after I couldn’t see her, it was pretty much game over.>
<But, Mark. You should have been able to detect her.>
<How?>
<Mark. You don’t have eyes, remember?>
Fucking hell. Fuck it all to hell. I’d gotten so used to having no facial features the knowledge was just background noise.
<You use some sort of extra-sensory perception to quote see unquote out of your skull. If you pump power into those senses, I bet you can beat her darkness trick. Or invisibility. It may take some practice, but I’m sure you can do it.>
I’d lost the fight because I hadn’t thought things through. I’d thought I couldn’t feel any worse, and once again I’d been proven wrong.
<Ouch. Mark, stop beating yourself up! There’s no point. There were also a bunch of Ukrainians with disruptors in the area. Even if you’d beaten the Bitch of Pinsk, they’d have mowed you down.>
<Okay, I hear you. Next time, I just might have a little surprise for her.>
<Getting back on track… I think if we channel enough energy, we could overload the disruptor restraints. The question is, do we try to do that right now, or do we wait for a better chance?>
Now that was an interesting question. Christine’s theory had given me hope; before hearing it I’d been pretty much convinced we were shit out of luck. I was half-tempted to start fighting the shackles right
away, to let all my anger and frustration come out and play. I’d felt my power increasing even over the few frenzied seconds I’d been fighting Baba Yaga. I might just be able to bust out.
Only problem was, when I increased my strength and speed, I’d also started to burn up from the inside out. In the middle of the fight, it hadn’t seemed all that important, but I worried that my Type Two Neo body might not be able to handle the amount of energy I was pouring into it. What happens if you put a jet engine into a regular car? Nothing good, I figured. If push came to shove, though, I’d have to go for it, and hope I didn’t burn out before I did what I had to.
More importantly, when we made our move, it would be for all the marbles, and we’d only have one shot to get it right. I was pretty sure the Ukrainians weren’t going to let me survive once they figured they couldn’t keep me contained. Even worse, that might also apply to Christine. They’d been willing to kill her once already. Win or die. I was probably being chickenshit, but I wasn’t quite ready to roll the dice. <I think we should wait and try to get more information,> I said after a few moments of thought. <We’re only going to get once chance to escape.>
<You’re thinking if we try and fail, they’ll kill us.>
<Yes. Neos that are too dangerous to contain don’t get reprieves. Not in the US, and certainly not in the Ukraine. We either break out or we die.>
<Okay, then. We wait. I’ll play along with them, try to avoid the torture stuff. My Dad told me to bide my time. He probably knew what he was talking about?>
<You talked to your father? As in, after…>
<Yep. It wasn’t quite Lurker the White making his triumphant return from Moria, but it was pretty good. My dreaming life is almost as eventful as my real life.>