Read Mind Storm Online

Authors: K.M. Ruiz

Mind Storm (21 page)

“I actually thought it would be Kerr who would ask that question,” Lucas said as he rubbed at his face with both hands. “Him being the telepath and all.”

“Before or after you screwed with his head some more?”

Lucas let out a harsh little laugh. “Oh. I like you, Threnody. You actually
think
.”

“Can't say I feel the same about you.”

“I figured as much.” Lucas moved to put his feet on the floor, leaning forward as he studied Threnody. He wiggled his fingers at his head. “You're wondering why everyone's not as pissed off as they should be. Why everyone is just going along with what I want when all of you should be fighting me tooth and nail.”

“Something like that.”

“Mental suggestion. I implanted it when all of you were under during your brain surgery back in London. I needed you four to trust me.”

“Trust isn't something you
suggest
. It's something you
earn
.”

“Since when have rank-and-file Strykers ever trusted Warhounds outside of an ordered suicide mission?”

“What do you mean?”

“Ah.” Lucas nodded to himself. “So you
weren't
scheduled for retrieval. Even better, because it means Nathan doesn't know about any of you.”

“What the hell are you talking about?”

“Sometimes I think your OIC keeps more secrets than my family does.” Lucas lifted a hand to rub at the back of his neck, fingers digging into the knotted muscles there. “We're the ones you rogue psions run to when the government wants you terminated and the Strykers still need you alive. Your OIC asks and we retrieve. I've always thought the Silence Law was more favorable to my side. We've been doing things with psion powers that none of you have even been allowed to
think
about, for fear that the government will lose control of its favorite dogs. It's a bargain, if you will. Your silence for my family's freedom.”

Threnody recoiled sharply from him, disbelief thick in her voice. “You and your Warhounds aren't something I would ever willingly run to.”

“Lucky for us, those Strykers we're sent to retrieve never get a choice in the matter, either during the transfer or after, when we mindwipe them for loyalty. Technically, I suppose that doesn't apply here. I'm not a Warhound the same way you're no longer a Stryker. Keep your title, if you want. If it makes you feel in control. Just know that you're not. That you never will be.”

“Neither are you.”

“I know what my sacrifices will gain me,” Lucas said as a thin trickle of bright red blood slid down out of his nose. “I know
exactly
what I will get at the end, if we pull it all off this time. And I will do absolutely everything and anything to achieve what Aisling promised my family. What she promised
me
.”

Threnody's gaze followed that slow-moving line of blood until it dripped off the edge of Lucas's jaw and fell to the floor. “Even if it kills you before you turn thirty?”

“Try twenty-three.”

Threnody met Lucas's gaze without blinking, a slight tick twitching at her jaw. Nerves, but not the emotional sort. Synapses that still weren't healed, but better than they had been. Lucas leaned forward, using his telekinesis to keep her still while he curved his hand over her chin. He tilted her head from side to side, ignoring the fury that came into her blue eyes.

“You need to understand something,” Lucas said, voice quiet, tired, the set of his shoulders tense. “We're what the future turns on, you and I. We're the ones who have to do what Aisling says if any of us are going to survive humanity's belabored attempt to reclaim Mars. Everything changes, Threnody. Without mercy, without exception, without pause. The best we can do is change the future into something better. If psions are ruling on Mars or ruling here, what does it matter? We'll all still be alive as a people.”

“Don't touch me.”

Lucas released her, lifting a hand to his own face to wipe at the blood there. Threnody watched as he studied the red smear on his fingertips, mouth pulled slightly off-center in a dissatisfied frown.

“What's in the Arctic?” Threnody said.

Lucas sighed. “Matron doesn't know when to keep her mouth shut.”

“That free will you let some of these scavengers keep, kind of annoying, isn't it? Why didn't you just mindwipe them?”

“Because that's not always the answer.”

Threnody shrugged dismissively. “The Arctic. What's so important about it?”

“There's a Norwegian island in that archipelago. Spitsbergen. Pretty much everyone except those on the World Court and my family have forgotten it exists.” Lucas pushed himself to his feet and stretched until his bones cracked. “A lot of people died during the bombing years of the Border Wars. The majority of the world population died afterward, from disease and starvation and environmental change. Every country that exported food to the masses was targeted and destroyed. Agriculture as we knew it back then became impossible on radiation-tainted soils. That's where the deadzones came from.”

“I know that. Everyone does.”

“Then ask yourself how the SkyFarms came to be. Clean soil? A decent selection of foods and farm animals that could feed the remaining population that the World Court just
happened
to have at their fingertips? Please.”

Threnody opened her mouth to argue, but paused, thinking hard. After a long moment, she said, “If the world was so polluted and damaged from nuclear war back then, where did uncontaminated food supplies come from? That's what you're asking, isn't it?”

“Glad to see that the government didn't fry all the synapses in your head every time they flipped that switch of theirs.”

Threnody waved off his insult, brow furrowed in thought. “You said we left terraforming machines on Mars. Did we have any here before the Border Wars for our own use?”

“Terraforming machines were expensive. Governments couldn't agree on where to begin here on Earth, which is why they focused on Mars.”

“You didn't answer my question.” She looked up at him, understanding dawning on her face seconds later. “The SkyFarms. They were built with terraforming machines, weren't they?”

Lucas just smiled.

Threnody dug her fingers into the durable synthfabric of her black BDUs. “What's on that island, Lucas?”

“Machines,” Lucas answered after a moment. “Machines and the Svalbard Global Seed and Gene Bank. You don't really think the government is willing to leave without the supplies that feed us, do you?”

Threnody could feel her heart beating against her ribs, the blood rushing in her ears.

“Aisling wants us to save the world, Threnody. It's a little more complicated than simply inciting rebellion.”

“I—” Threnody swallowed thickly, her mouth gone suddenly dry. “I'm beginning to understand that.”

“Reasoning. Better than a mindwipe any day of the week.” Lucas headed for the door. “I'm done with Kerr. His shields will stay up now.”

“And Jason? Are you going to work on him?”

“I've been in his head and tested his shields.”

“Meaning?”

“I'm going to need a little help breaking them open and Kerr isn't going to be enough.”

“So who's going to help you?” Threnody said, suspicion creeping into her voice.

Lucas didn't answer, and then he was gone. Threnody wasn't surprised at his silence. Sighing, she turned her attention back to Kerr's unconscious form, half her thoughts on Lucas's words.

PART FIVE

SUB ROSA

 

SESSION DATE
: 2128.03.15

LOCATION
: Institute of Psionics Research

CLEARANCE ID
: Dr. Amy Bennett

SUBJECT
: 2581

FILE NUMBER
: 249

“She thinks there's another way,” Aisling says as she peers into the camera, her image larger than usual due to her proximity to the camera. The glue that keeps the electrodes attached to her skull has left her skin red and raw in places. “There are, you know. Lots of them. They just don't work.”

Aisling pushes away from the camera and wanders back to her seat and sits down. She is alone in the room, a bright spot of yellow in the whiteness. The machines she is connected to hum with results that are off every reliable scale. The fingers of one hand curve over one knobby knee and tap out a rhythm that matches the pulse of her heartbeat.

“It's so hard to find the right one.” Aisling tangles one small hand in her hair and the wires there, gently yanking at both. She squeezes her eyes shut. “You wanted a better half-life. You wanted a better future for everyone.”

Aisling tilts her head to the side as if she is listening to something no one else can hear. “You always say that. Every time you get this far and fail, you blame me.”

The little girl sighs and opens her eyes. She stares at the camera and peels an electrode off her forehead. “What's wrong, Ciari? Don't you like your present?”

[
SEVENTEEN
]

AUGUST 2379
THE HAGUE, THE NETHERLANDS

The old doors to the Deliberation Room closed with a quiet click, the jamming technology that was activated at the start of each session coming online. The fifteen robed men and women surrounding the long, rectangular conference table knew their privacy was assured. Those whose job it was to man those programs knew if they failed at their position, death would be a hoped-for punishment, not necessarily one they would ultimately receive.

“I call this Court into session,” Erik said as he struck the gavel he held in one hand on a small tablet of old, lacquered wood. The antiquated gesture had been repeated thousands upon thousands of times before this. He would give it up if he could, but it was tradition. Some things even the World Court couldn't be rid of. “We have work to do, Justices.”

The fourteen other men and women nodded, their voices ringing from deep bass to high soprano as they stated agreement. They were different in age and nationality and gender; the one solid thing they had in common was clean DNA.

“The launch date has been moved up to the end of September. We're beginning to prep registered citizens for swift transfer to the Paris Basin. Where do we stand on those totals?” Erik said.

Travis Athe, in his late fifties, tapped decisively at the screen of his datapad. “We have solid readiness from the United Kingdom, the European Union, the East Coast of America, the Canadian Territories, the South American Coalition, Japan, China, and the Southeastern Asian Territories. The numbers are sufficient so far.”

“Registered dissidents?” Anchali asked, looking down the table at the president. The elderly woman who was Thai in name only and culturally Chinese was the oldest serving member of the World Court. She was also Erik's strongest conservative supporter as the vice president. That didn't mean they always saw eye to eye.

Erik gestured expansively with one hand. “We've quietly tagged those we believe to be a problem through the security grid. Quads are monitoring their movements. They will be rounded up at the slightest hint of defiance and contained well before the launch date.”

“What of the hijacking in Spain?” Cherise Molyneux said. “Those tankers were en route to the Paris Basin when they were stolen and the rest destroyed.”

“While we don't know where those rogue psions retreated to, we have enough oil to supply our endeavors once we arrive at the colony. They've never targeted the shuttle fuel transports, and the shuttles on the launchpads remain fully operational. That shipment was simply a precaution.”

“I'm more worried about rogue psions knowing our plans.” Cherise leaned forward, the beautiful Frenchwoman glaring at Erik. She was the youngest judge on the World Court, with aspirations that would get her killed, sooner or later, if she continued antagonizing him. Erik rather hoped she did. Her dissenting opinions over the past few years had been quite annoying.

Erik leaned back in his cushioned leather chair and stared at Cherise. “Are you questioning our position, Justice? I can assure you that this has been decades in the making and we have been vigilant in keeping it secret. Unless you doubt your own work?”

A faint hint of red stained Cherise's face, but faded in moments. She lifted her chin slightly in defiance. “I don't doubt our accomplishments, Erik. I'm stating a fact that
all
of us here worry about. The Strykers and these Warhounds have been fighting for what seems like forever. The rogue psions are not leashed as they should be. What if they
know
?”

“Do you doubt the protection that our dogs provide us?” Erik said, brown eyes steady as he looked at her.

“Through what constitutes slavery,” Travis said from down the table. “Which is never a guarantee.”

“Since when has that bothered you and yours?” Erik arched an eyebrow. “When our ancestors hunted down psions after the Border Wars, we saw their uses and hobbled the threat. They obey us because they know little else, we make sure of that. For every generation we humans live through, psions go through two. If they reach thirty or beyond, it's a miracle. Genetics play as much a role in keeping them in check as we do. In the grand scheme of things, psions are useful up to a point, but they're an evolutionary dead end.”

“The fact that they are slaves doesn't bother me,” Travis said slowly. “What concerns me is that they are more dangerous than the average slave, and for all that we control the Strykers, we don't control
all
the psions in the world.”

“Would you rather have all of them free to use their powers against us rather than just some? The Strykers Syndicate was created for a reason. The Strykers live to obey and serve humanity. They have their orders. These Warhounds will not have access to the Paris Basin, nor to the shuttles that wait there. No psion will follow us into space. That directive still stands, and the OIC knows to keep that fact classified until it's time to inform the rank-and-file Strykers about the launch.”

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