All
scenes and situations are completely fictional and created
in the author's mind. Any similarity to recent events is
purely coincidental.
Episode
03-03: Gray Area
by
Toni Walker and Sacha Davis
The
Legacy Infirmary wasn’t exactly his favorite place to be,
but he had promised himself that he’d visit both Scarlett
and Michela. He barely made it up the outer stairwell before
he heard a car door slam and Eden Fairchild saunter up the
steps after him.
“Why
are you following me?” Kevin Fairchild said as he entered
the backdoor of the establishment. Three steps inside he
dodged a pair of orderlies as they rounded the corner. He
eyed the retreating men, cautiously. Those men must really
be into their jobs, he determined.
Eden
evaded his question until they arrived at the nurses’ station
where an elderly lady in her early sixties was answering
phones.
“I’m
following you because I have to talk to you,” Eden’s chin
length red hair shined making her seem all the more crafty.
Kevin
remembered his last encounter with her well.
“Oh,
really? Since when do you talk? I thought maybe you showed
up to do a quickie in the car.”
The
nurse tending to the station gasped at Kevin’s crass remark.
Her eyes grew wide.
“Sorry,”
Kevin apologized. “She brings out the worst in me. I didn’t
mean it to come out like that. But some people’s motivations
never change.”
It
was Eden’s turn to act all aghast.
“I’ll
have you know I have changed a lot in three years.”
“Ever
get yourself that apartment you keep talking about? The
one where you actually own furniture?”
She
rolled her eyes and he had his answer.
“Like
I said. Some people never change.”
“I
have changed!”
“I’ll
believe it when I see it.” Kevin turned to the nurse. “I’m
here to see Scarlett Gray.”
The
nurse contemplated a moment then her face brightened.
“Yes,
I remember that one. Sweet girl. And that hair. So red!
You never forget a patient like that.” The nurse eyed Eden.
“You two look quite a lot alike. Are you related?”
Kevin
nudged Eden who had been staring off into space waiting
for Kevin to finish his business. She painted an interested
smile on her lips.
“Who?
Me?”
The
nurse nodded.
“I
seriously doubt it. I know who my parents are, and
their last name isn’t Gray.
The
elderly nurse smiled in apology. “My mistake.” She ran her
finger over the clipboard where they kept the patients’
names listed. “Shoot. I forgot. Looks like you just missed
her. Her grandfather checked her out early this morning.
Oh, yes,” she said after a short pause. “I remember. Darleen,
the morning nurse, she told me what a distinguished gentleman
he was. Really fancy looking silver cane. Just between us.
I think Darleen was trying to play matchmaker again.”
“You
have that problem too?” Kevin smiled at the older woman,
who had hardly a sprinkle of gray in her hair. Suddenly
the importance of her words hit him. “Did you say, grandfather?”
Kevin
turned toward Eden.
“According
to the intel from Jeffrey, Scarlett Gray doesn’t have any
living grandparents.”
“Don’t
you just hate it when they come back from the grave like
that?” Eden deadpanned.
“Cut
the crap, Eden. I’m being serious here. Scarlett has been
kidnapped by someone claiming to be her grandfather.”
“OH,
RIGHT!” Eden yelled. “Like some old geezer is going to come
waltzing into a secure Legacy operation and cart out a patient?
When has that ever happened?”
“Actually,
at this facility, never,” the nurse informed them.
“Let
me see the name on her release papers.” Kevin grabbed for
the clipboard but the nurse was faster.
“Oh,
my,” the nurse lamented. “I have it all up here in my little
ole brain. No need to go looking for that hard to decipher
document. Darleen told me, you remember me telling you about
Darleen? Sweet girl. Anyway, his name was Chandelor Knight.
Doesn’t that sound so rich and fancy? Rich and fancy to
match that silver cane of his. I wonder if he’s single?”
“Rich
and fancy? Well, that’s one way of looking at him.”
“Who
is Chandelor Knight?” Eden’s tone was fraught with more
than a casual interest.
“He’s
about as high up in the ivory tower as you can get and still
breath the air. You’ve heard of the Knights Foundation?
Well, Chandelor Knight IS the Knights Foundation. Corruption,
money, power... you name it, I’ve heard it about him. The
Legacy grapevine is filled with rumors about the elusive
powerhouse.”
“Does
this mean you’re little redheaded friend is in danger? I’d
really hate to think she’s in danger.”
“I
don’t know,” Kevin said. “But I’m sure the hell going to
find out.”
He
ran off down the hall with Eden trailing after him. The
nurse watched them leave then picked up the extension and
dialed.
“Chandelor
Knight, please. It’s Vivian at the Infirmary.”
“Is
my granddaughter comfortable, Fergus?” Chandelor Knight
limped toward the doorway using his cane for support. It
was a decorative piece. Not one he used regularly, but one
he reserved for special occasions -- Formal get togethers,
black tie affairs. But today of all days he had to bring
it out and dust it off.
Today
Chandelor Knight was going to meet his grandchildren for
the first time. It was a monumental moment in his life.
“Your
granddaughter is resting comfortably, sir. Will you be needing
anything on your jaunt out and about?”
“No,
just tell the pilot to bring the helicopter around.” He
smiled, then slapped his butler, Charles Ferguson on the
back. “My boy, my grandchildren come as a set. I can’t have
one without the other. I’m going out there and I won’t come
back without my grandson in tow. That, dear friend, is a
promise.”
Gia
Doyle ran through the secret entrance and down to the sub
levels faster than anyone on record. She had to get Ethan
out of there before the entire mountain collapsed around
them.
“Please
be alive,” she whispered in a voice that was full of unfamiliar
emotion. Her words were more than a whisper, they were a
prayer.
Faith
Fairchild eyed Phoenix Gray with dazed confusion. Phoenix
figured she was in shock., and who wouldn’t be? It wasn’t
everyday you survived an explosion, fell to your death,
lived and then found your brother attached to a computer
console like an absurd version of Light Bright.
“You’re
going to be all right.”
Phoenix
tried to make the words sound as level as possible, but
a truck load of pain seared through his body. He tried to
subside it by clinching his teeth. That helped a bit, but
not nearly enough. He watched a tear slide down Faith’s
dirt-stained face. Her tough exterior was melting fast.
Her
hand shook as she ran it down her brother’s face. It was
a face that brought both joy and fear. Faith tried to block
out what Ian, Ethan’s twin, had done to her. But she found
that even after all these years he still taunted her from
the grave. Now she felt it stronger than she had since the
day it happened. The pain was not gone but lingering in
the back of her mind waiting for the perfect moment to break
her will. She vowed to never let that happen. She wouldn’t
be a victim again.
“Ethan?”
she called. “Can you hear me?”
The
man strapped to the table groaned. His eyes fluttered, but
they didn’t open.
She
turned to Phoenix who was holding his stomach like he was
in his own sort of pain.
“What
have they done to him?” Her voice was nearly hoarse, and
tears stained Faith’s face in blotchy streaks. Her throat
felt like someone had clamped it shut shoving all her emotions
into that one tiny spot.
“Help
me,” she cried, reaching for the first wire. “Help me get
him out of this contraption.”
Gia’s
stomach fell leaving her with a bottomless feeling of pure
dread. Faith’s hand was extended toward the wires surrounding
Ethan’s head. Was she too late?
“NO!
STOP!” Gia ran at Faith like a raging bull. “Remove those
wires and you’ll kill him!”
Faith’s
hand jerked back instinctively. “Oh, God,” she cried, as
her body slumped to the floor. Her entire being was a spasm
of sobs. Her voice quivered and caught as she tried to speak.
“Why is it everything I do is wrong? I pushed him away.
I was a bad sister. I nearly killed him!”
As
the wails continued, Gia attempted to get her own breathing
under control. She closed her eyes and commanded her heart
to slow down. It was beating a mile a minute. Right now
she couldn’t lose her head, she had to remain focused.
“You,”
she pointed, at Phoenix. “When I pull a cord, you do the
same on the opposite side. Understand? Stand over there.”
She indicated the other side of the bed.
Phoenix
nodded since he couldn’t speak. His own pain was becoming
unbearable.
“Good.
I pull this one, you pull that one. On the count of three,
we’ll remove them both at the exact same time.”
“Okay,”
he grunted through clenched teeth. “No pressure for perfection
or anything.”
“Listen
to me, kid. Slip up and he dies. If that happens, you’re
next.” Gia was not going to entertain the possibility of
failure.
As
they worked, Faith couldn’t tear her eyes from Ethan’s face.
It was so expressionless, so unlike him. No quick smile.
No funny retort.
“I’m
so sorry, Ethan,” she said softly. “I’ll be better. It will
be good again between us. All I wanted was for you to love
me, care about me, but I didn’t give you a chance.” A sob
escaped as she sighed. “I didn’t want this to happen.”
Suddenly,
one of Ethan’s arms slipped from the table and dangled in
mid air between Faith and Gia. Gia froze until the movement
of the arm ceased, then they continued with their delicate
operation of removing the wires. Gia and Phoenix completed
the procedure and breathed a collective sigh of relief.
Success.
Faith
started to move the arm back into place when she saw the
mark. A small strawberry birthmark on his wrist. It was
the only exterior thing to distinguish Ethan from his twin,
Ian. As far as twins went, they were exact duplicates of
each other.
“No,
NO!” Faith scrambled backward as fast as she could, putting
distance between her and the man on the table.
"Him!”
She pointed at the man. “Him! It’s not him.” A spasm shook
her body. “NO,” she whispered. “You’re dead. DEAD, damn
you!” Her cries penetrated her words breaking up the sentences
in a choppy rhythm. “You’re suppose to be dead!”
Ethan’s
twin opened his eyes and the dull blackness of his stare
burned a hole through her. She physically flinched as his
eyes made contact.
Gia
ran to her side and attempted to comfort her, but she wasn’t
used to situations like this.
“What
are you talking about. This is Ethan, your brother. It’s
okay.”
“No,”
she said in a barely audible whimper. “It will never be
okay again.”
Gia
turned from her crouched position and took in the features
of the man lying on the table. The eyes were cold, almost
ruthless. Nothing like Ethan’s. “Oh, God, Franklin, what
have we done?”
As
Phoenix crossed to be at Faith’s side, the man on the table
bolted upward.
An
evil grin spread across his face that chilled them to the
bone.
“Faith,”
he said. “My lovely, Faith. I’ve come back for you.
Faith’s
scream echoed through the tunnels of the monastery. Nothing
would ever be the same again.
She
had hoped he would die, even prayed for God to deliver her
from the specter of evil that haunted her nights, her dreams
and her life. Yet God wasn’t proving to be so faithful.
She had kept his covenants, followed the Golden Rule and
still the pain inside grew. Her aunt Sister Mary Rosa, told
her to give her problems up to God. That He would take care
of it. He would take care of his children.
How
could God take care of something like this? He couldn’t
make her memory go away. He couldn’t make the images of
Ian raping her stop flashing through her mind.
Faith
had gotten good at covering up. She painted on a smile and
a cheery disposition and let the world think she was okay.
But
inside – inside Faith Fairchild was far from okay.
She
stared at the man she thought was dead and tried not to
scream a second time. Her body involuntarily shuddered,
but she didn’t scream. She wasn’t going to give the bastard
the satisfaction.
“You
did this to me,” she said in a low, hoarse voice. Tears
dripped from her face like broken promises.
“I
loved you. Just loved you.” Ian’s smile spread across his
face like a plague. It was more than wicked, it was evil.
His
eyes crinkled up in that electric way Ethan’s did, but he
wasn’t Ethan.
“I
will always love you, Faith.”
Faith
resisted the urge to throw up by glancing away. Her heart
was thumping so hard and fast she was afraid everyone could
see it. Hear it.
Looking
up, her eyes met Phoenix’s startled orbs. He didn’t say
a word, merely placed a hand on her shoulder giving it a
reassuring squeeze.
Ian’s
own eyes narrowed at the friendly, supportive gesture. He
bound off the table and closed the distance between them.
His glare was filled with a sudden disgust for Phoenix Gray.
Faith
could sense Ian’s quickening breath and raging emotions.
She remembered it all too well.
“This
is who you replace me with?” Ian gestured toward Phoenix
dramatically. “This child? This little boy?”
The
inflection in Ian’s tone grew in pitch until at the height
of his rant he grabbed Faith’s shoulders.
“Let
me show you what a mistake that would be.”
Ian’s
head descended toward Faith’s. She squirmed and tried to
break free but his grip was too strong. How could he possibly
be stronger than before? This wasn’t happening again.
Gia
was stunned into silence. What in the hell had she unleashed
into the world? This was supposed to be a good deed. One
that would put her back in Ethan’s good graces not push
them farther away from each other.
Who
was Ian Fairchild really, and what had he done to Faith?
Franklin had never mentioned Ian was unbalanced or psychotic.
But then again, what father would see his child in that
way?
Maybe
the drugs they’d injected into his body to stimulate the
cerebral cortex were affecting him in unforeseen ways? The
behavior he was displaying could be a side effect of the
procedure.
But
what if it wasn’t? What if she and Franklin had unleashed
a threat to the world? A threat that had touched Faith and
wounded her deeply. The idea was too horrifying to contemplate.
Suddenly,
she became aware of Ian’s hands on Faith, and a protective
instinct in her kicked into high gear. Ian’s face was hovering
over hers like he wanted to kiss her.
“What
are you doing?” Gia shouted “Let go of her!” The tall, lanky
woman placed herself between Faith and Ian.
Ian’s
jaw set in a hard line as he took in every aspect of Gia
Doyle.
“You
must not know me, because nothing stands in the way of what
I want,” he bit out. “Nothing.”
“Well,
then,” she said just as coldly, mirroring his demeanor.
“Consider me a road block, because you will never lay another
hand on her!”
Ian
took one step backward in appreciation of her courage and
conviction, then crossed both arms over his chest.
“Never
say never.”
“Dammit,
Kevin! Where are you going? I said I needed to talk to you.”
Eden
Fairchild followed after Kevin as he stalked down the infirmary
hallway.
“I
never said I’d wait around to listen.” He turned the corner
and marched down the corridor trying to ignore the redhead.
In
front of a patient’s open door, Eden stopped him. She grabbed
him by the shoulder forcing Kevin to face her.
“You’re
going to listen to what I have to say whether you like it
or not.”
"She's
a vegetable. I don't know why we have to take good care
of her."
"At
least she's a good looking one."
Michela
felt the tiniest smile playing around the edges of her mouth.
It was amazing what people would say when they thought you
weren't listening. She cracked the lid of her eyes only
to see white walls and tiles as she was wheeled down a long
hallway...The Legacy infirmary...how thoughtful of Kevin.
Michela took her mind back to that moment when she touched
her lips to his. She knew it would cause trouble, but she
still did it, feeling his hard lips push back at her, parting
slightly. She'd seen it before, that look of carefully controlled
desire on his face, decidedly blank except for his eyes
that burned. He knew that Michela Forsythe was a one-man
woman and he had no chance with her. That was why she kissed
him, and kissed him well. The only way Michela would ever
betray Ethan was if she was out of her mind, and Kevin had
to believe that. The kiss was the only way.
The
two junior agents who had been assigned the unfortunate
duty of wheeling her around the infirmary turned the corner
in a not-so-gentle manner. Michela worked hard not to let
her body tense up, letting it's full weight fall against
the straps that were holding her supposedly comatose body
in the wheelchair. Not much further and she could relax.
She flicked her eyes open for just a moment, just enough
to take in more of her surroundings. That was when she saw
it.
It
was just a glimpse, only enough to make her think maybe
she hadn't seen anything at all. Hazily, through blinds,
it looked like a man sitting on a hospital bed, a gun in
his mouth.
"Damn."
Mike muttered. She didn't think, but reacted, pulling off
the straps and pushing herself out of the chair, leaving
two bewildered agents staring after the backside as she
ran towards the room. With all her strength she ran towards
the door as if her life depended on it.
Click.
The
sound of the empty gun echoed in the room and Declan opened
his eyes. The chamber was empty.
Damn.
Slowly
he let the gun fall into his lap as a sob wracked his body
and he felt a tear slip down his cheek. The room was quiet...so
quiet...like death, he imagined. Like Kat.
All
of the sudden the door to his room flew open and a woman
burst in, wild eyed and breathing fast. She stared at him,
her mouth opening to form words that wouldn't come out.
She
was beautiful, dusky hair and skin culminating in eyes like
dark pools that could suck you dry. Her hair was pulled
back against her head with a few strands escaping onto her
forehead and she wore only a hospital gown that revealed
long, sinewy legs. Declan's eyes traveled to her arms which
were strong and muscular. The detached feeling of danger
floated through Declan's head and he instinctively reached
for his gun, his fingers feeling the smooth metal. The woman's
pupil's contracted as she watched his hand move over the
gun and her body tensed up.
"No!"
Her
voice cut through the quiet as she lunged across the room,
knocking Declan back on the bed and sending his gun skidding
across the tile floor. They were lying on the bed, the woman
on top of him, pinning him with her knees, her hands on
either side of his head and her face staring down into his.
"Please."
Declan begged. " Just let me die."
Kevin
Fairchild couldn’t help but try and occupy his worried mind.
Scarlett had been kidnapped. Then to top off his already
bad day, Eden Fairchild had decided to unexpectedly drop
back into his life. Was he on God’s hit list, or what?
Three
years ago he thought he and Eden might have a future together.
Neither of them were truly of Fairchild blood, but animosity
from his father and hers started a sequence of events that
eventually tore the two of them apart. Ultimately, it had
been Eden herself, who had ended the affair, claiming she
just wasn’t ready for such a commitment. Neither was he,
but he had been willing to give up anything for her. Apparently,
she didn’t feel the same way about him. That was then, this
was now and both their lives had veered off in opposite
directions – until this afternoon.
A
noise emanating from the patient’s room drew his and Eden’s
attention. They gazed into the small space only to see a
woman with straight brunette hair straddling a man lying
on the bed. The two looked intimate and spoke in hushed
whispers only they could hear and understand.
Kevin
began to close the door when something familiar about the
woman struck him. Maybe it was the way she tucked a mass
of brown hair behind her ear. He didn’t know. But suddenly,
he knew without a shadow of a doubt who this woman was.
“Michela?”
Kevin’s teeth automatically clinched and a vein in his jaw
throbbed.
Eden
noticed his sudden one-eighty in behavior.
“What’s
wrong?” she asked, peering into the room.
“Nothing.”
The word was said with such venom that it was clear it was
not a nothing situation. It was something.
“Do
you know that woman?”
Eden
seemed too concerned about his emotional state and it was
beginning to annoy him.
“Apparently,
not as well as I thought I did.” He sidestepped the redhead
and stalked out to his car.
Eden
trailed not far behind.
“Kevin,
wait!” she screamed, as his car peeled out of the parking
lot. “I have to talk to you.”
Her
beat up silver Camero had seen better days, but Eden wasn’t
worried about the nature of her car. She was worried about
Kevin. She had wasted too many years being bitter. Now all
she wanted to know was if he could forgive her once he learned
the truth?
Suddenly,
her cell phone trilled bringing her back to reality. She
flipped it open placing the compact item next to her ear.
“Miss
Fairchild?” said a woman’s voice. “This is Darla McGrath.”
When
Eden didn’t immediately answer, the woman clarified. “I’m
the nanny? The one your father hired?”
“Oh,
right.” Eden’s said, her interest growing. “Is there something
wrong with Cassie?”
“I’m
sorry but there’s been an accident...”
Eden
barely heard the remainder of the nanny’s words. She flew
down the stairs toward the Camero and slid behind the wheel.
“This
can’t be happening,” she whispered. “Not now. Not before
I tell Kevin everything.”
She
threw the vehicle into reverse and backed the silver behemoth
out of the parking space. As she drove back to her father’s
house, she contemplated on exactly how to tell Kevin about
Cassie.
It
all happened so fast. Michela stared down at the man she
had pinned to the bed, watching his lips moved as he begged
her to let him put the gun in his mouth and blow his brains
out. There was something in his eyes that made her want
to turn away. Something that she recognized like a houseguest
that won't go away: a deep and abiding pain.
"Love
isn't worth dying for." Michela said softly, watching the
emotion on the man's face. She pictured Ethan, his face,
the way his eyes glazed over with desire, how soft those
rough hands could be, and her words seemed hollow and empty.
Sometimes she wished she'd had the guts to die for him.
"You
don't understand."
Michela
felt anger rise in her throat.
"Bullshit."
She hissed. "I've lost more than you could imagine, but
I have never put a gun in my mouth...not once."
The
man glared up at her, self-pity replaced by anger. He opened
his mouth to say something when they were both startled
by a loud crash behind them. Michela jumped off the bed
and whipped around to see one of the agents who had been
wheeling her down the hall pointing a shaking gun at her.
"Whoa
there buddy." Michela put her hand out and stepped towards
the agent when the loud bang of the gun going off filled
the room. A searing pain went through her thigh and Michela
clenched her teeth as she fell to the ground.
The
code red had come through only seconds before. Aimee pumped
her arms, trying to run faster. A code red meant only one
thing....
Amiee
rounded the corner, intent on getting to the south corridor
as fast as possible...so intent that she didn't see the
tall gentleman dressed in black until she ran into him.
"Hey."
The man said sharply. "What's going on here?"
"Agent
down...shot" Aimee said quickly, looking past him, down
the hall. She didn't even stop to think who the man was,
or wonder why he didn't know about the code red. She didn't
consider that the man shouldn't be there.
"Who
is it?"
"Agent
Forsythe."
"Is
she alive."
"For
now." Amiee glared, "unless I don't get to her in time."
Pushing
past the man, Aimee continued towards the south corridor,
not even turning around to see him pull a slim agency issue
satellite phone out of his pocket. They would ask her later
if she'd seen anything suspicious, but she'd already forgotten
about the man, focusing only on the agent who could be bleeding
to death at that very moment.
"Michela
is down." The man hissed into the phone glancing over to
make sure the nurse was out of earshot. "How would you like
me to proceed?"
Franklin
flipped his phone shut and sighed deeply. He was too old
for this, he thought to himself.
The
Nightingale project was starting to crumble. Years of experience
told Franklin it was time to pull out. The problem was that
pulling out also meant getting rid of the evidence, and
in this case, that meant Michela Forsythe.
Franklin
took another sip of the tea he'd been mulling over, sweet
and milky, just the way he liked it. The message had come
in last night. Nightingale had surfaced...the real Nightingale.
Franklin's hand gripped the mug tighter. Damn that woman.
She'd managed to remain faceless all those years, her anonymity
a condition for job completions. It was this anonymity Franklin
had counted on, figuring he could get Michela into the Black
Council and destroy Julian Black. All he needed to do was
brainwash Michela into believing she was Nightingale, an
easy feat considering Michela's already fragile mental state.
But now that the real Nightingale had showed her face, which
was nothing like Michela's, it would be impossible to get
her into the Council.
The
remaining problem was Michela.
Franklin
thought back to phone call he'd just received. She was lying
in the Legacy infirmary, injured. Franklin knew that putting
her under anesthesia would bring down the defenses of her
already weak psyche, and then it was only a matter of time
before the Legacy doctors realized that their patient had
been subjected to some kind of treatment to alter her personality.
After that, Michela would be subjected to the standard seek
and destroy testing the Legacy put any agent through who
was considered a security risk. It would only be a matter
of time before they traced the brainwashing to him, and
then all hell would break loose. Especially considering
everyone thought Franklin Fairchild was dead.
There
was one solution, a final solution, but even that wouldn't
solve all his problems. Franklin picked up his satellite
and dialed the number for his agent who was at this moment
waiting for orders.
Forgive
me, Ethan.
Franklin
took a deep breath as he heard the voice on the other end
of the line. He'd given this order countless times, yet
this time it felt different.
Kevin
somehow managed to find his way back to Legacy headquarters.
The halls were buzzing with activity per usual, but he didn’t
comprehend any of it. Oblivious, he stalked down the hallways
and ended up in the shooting range. Somehow he knew shooting
at invisible enemies would take his mind off his troubles.
He loaded the first target and sent it a few hundred yards
back. As he blasted the paper form full of holes, his mind
wandered back to the infirmary.
Her
hair shined like brownish black rain spilling down her back,
and she was wearing some sort of silky nightgown that rode
up on her thighs as she straddled the man in bed. All at
once, he knew why this was bothering him. He was jealous.
First of Ethan and his hold on Michela and now this man.
Who was he and how had he so successfully insinuated himself
into Michela’s life?
Kevin
emptied the clip into his paper adversary. Take that, you
damn mystery man, he thought.
A
giant hole pierced the outlined figure directly over the
heart.
“Dammit!”
Kevin slammed the gun down and tried to quell his rising
anger.
“Whoa,
there amigo,” Boswell Chapman said from his hiding place
two partitions away. “Looks like you need someone to talk
to.”
Kevin
took in Boswell with his silver hair clamped in a pony tail
and a pair of black ear phones hanging around his neck.
“Boswell,
don’t take this the wrong way, but get lost!”
“So
that’s how it’s going to be? Get lost? A word of advice.
If you don’t talk about whatever is eating at you, it will
tear you up inside.”
Kevin
reloaded his clip and repositioned a new target.
“It’s
not like I didn’t see it coming. I practically set myself
up for to fall hard for her.” He fired a few rounds then
paused in thought.
“Is
this about Michela or Eden? I heard she was back in town.”
“Seeing
her again dredged up the demons I thought I had put behind
me. Michela only added an aura of complication to the mix.”
He shot two more rounds then brought the paper target forward.
“Why
am I such an idiot, Boswell?”
“You’re
not an idiot, Kevin. You’re a man in love.”
“Are
you sure? Julian Black shouted into his cell phone. He was
connected to a Council operative who had important information
to pass along to him.
“Yes,
sir. We intercepted a transmission between Kevin Fairchild
and that controller Jeffrey.” The BC operative paused. “She’s
in there, sir. That’s a definite.”
Julian’s
gun metal blue Jeep bounced down the dirtroad closing in
on his destination. He cursed and shouted into the wind.
“Dammit! I can’t believe they left her down there to die.
What kind of brothers are those Fairchilds? Leaving one
of their own.”
Over
the next ridge the monastery came into sight.
“Hold
on, Faith. I’m coming.”
He
surveyed the area around the monastery once he arrived.
For as far as the eye could see, complete and total devastation.
Julian leaned against a rock and bowed his head. Praying
wasn’t something he was use to doing but he figured he might
need some divine guidance right about now.
“God,
I haven’t been the best Catholic, but please don’t let her
be dead.”
The
communicator crackled at his hip.
“Sir,
we have four life forms somewhere far below the surface.”
“Tell
me they’re alive.”
Julian
held his breath.
“Yes,
sir. All alive.”
He
exhaled a relieved sigh.
“Take
a survey of the outer perimeter and find me an entrance!
Immediately!
Ian
Fairchild smiled at Faith. His eyes took on an spiteful
glint that managed to be even more sadistic than the man’s
eyes who invaded her dreams.
“Faith,
what’s wrong? You don’t look happy to see me.”
Gia
moved Faith behind her and reached for her gun. It wasn’t
there!
In
her haste she must have left it in the car.
“You
stay away from her asshole!”
Ian
clicked his tongue in disgust.
“My,
my,” his pause was intentional. “Such language from a woman.
Haven’t you heard the expression, you catch more bees with
honey?”
Gia
glanced toward Phoenix who was now leaning against the wall.
When he coughed, a spray of blood emitted from his mouth.
She had to get both of them out of here. And she had to
do it fast, the boy wasn’t going to make it long in his
condition.”
“I
wouldn’t worry about him. He’s as good as dead.”
Ian
pulled a live wire from the wall. It sparked and crackled
proving it was filled with electrical current. He lunged
toward the boy, but Gia blocked him sending him into the
control panel. The wire flailed about landing at last on
the bed Ian had been lying on. The bedsheets burst into
flames.
Gia
gathered up both teens and shoved them toward the door.
“We have to get out of here, NOW!”
Ian
leaped over the obstacles on the floor beating the trio
to the door. He locked and bolted it. In his hand he revealed
a gun.
“No
one is going anywhere.”
Coming
up on The Legacy:
Ethan
and Eden overhear a confession.
Knights
Foundation Pilot Stone Jacobs discovers that Michela Forsythe
is dead and confronts his boss about it.
Julian
Black is discovered to be somewhat of an ally.
Phoenix's
life hangs in the balance.