28
HER gaze dropped from Alejandro’s face to Sante’s
exposed throat. Alejandro was giving her what she’d worked toward
for years. It was literally almost within reach.
She rose, staggered forward, and knelt before
Sante, her fangs already growing longer.
“Do you remember her, Sante?” she asked him. “Do
you remember Julia?”
His eyes seemed to flash black for a moment. “I
remember them all.”
“Yes, but do you remember Julia? She’s the
one you were friends with before you murdered her. She’s the one
who probably met you at the door with a smile and a joke, the way
she always did.” Daria swallowed hard. “Right before you strangled
her to death.”
Sante snarled. “If you want me to say I regret what
I did, I do. There hasn’t been a day when I haven’t. A day hasn’t
gone by that I don’t remember each of those I killed.”
“That’s not what I wanted you to say, Sante. You
murdered her. No amount of regret will ever bring her back, so I
don’t want to hear about it. It’s done, and all that’s left to do
is make you pay.”
Rage enveloped his face. “I liked it. Is that what
you wanted to hear? It’s true, I loved killing all of them even
though I’m ashamed of it. Even though I’m afraid one day I might
look for the thrill again.” Something moved in his eyes. He held
her gaze. “Daria, kill me. Do it.”
Daria’s fangs extended into sharp points in
anticipation. She moved in to strike, her gaze focused on her
target, her life’s goal at hand.
Sante’s gaze flicked to hers and she hesitated.
Resignation shone in their depths now. Her mind flashed back to the
unsettling sensation of herself mirroring Sante.
Daria rocked back on her heels.
Sante closed his eyes and grit his teeth. “I would
have reveled in your death just now, Daria. Do it. Kill me.” He
sighed wearily. “I’ve lived long enough.”
Julia’s face popped into her mind, then the faces
of the others Sante had killed that night. A part of her wanted to
do it, to strike Christopher Sante’s life just as he’d struck
theirs, but if she did this, she would lose more of her soul than
she already had.
She raised her gaze to Alejandro. Their gazes met,
caught, and held. Hope glimmered in their dark depths.
Did he wish she wouldn’t do it?
“Now is your chance, Daria,” Alejandro said. “If
you think killing him will bring you peace, then do it.”
She looked down at Sante. Peace? No, killing him
wouldn’t bring her peace, or justice, and it certainly wouldn’t
bring Julia back from the dead.
“I don’t want your blood in my body.” She turned
her head and spit in the sand near him.
Alejandro turned him loose with a shove and Sante
collapsed face-first to the ground. Daria went motionless, watching
him lie there and spit out sand.
From his back pocket, Alejandro extracted a
zipstraint, strong plastic restraints that served as cuffs for law
enforcement in more casual situations. She had let him keep his
life, but there would be no way they’d let him go free. He secured
Sante’s wrists behind his back. Sante didn’t even put up a
fight.
But he didn’t have to, did he?
Their cover was blown and they were on Sante’s
turf, with one hundred and fifty dome guards at his beck and call.
Even cuffed, how would they arrest Sante and get him out of here?
There wasn’t much chance of them escaping the dome alive at this
point, let alone successfully bringing Sante in.
She turned to Alejandro. “Of course, you do know we
have a problem. By now Sante’s probably contacted all one hundred
and fifty of his guards on a pathway.”
“No. I didn’t.” Sante lifted his head and stared at
her, looking weary. “I’ll go willingly.”
“You? Go willingly? I doubt it, Sante,” Alejandro
answered.
“I mean it.” Sante never moved his gaze from
Daria’s. “It’s time to make things right.” Her expression must have
revealed her disbelief, because he continued, “I’ll confess to the
murders. I’ll allow myself to be imprisoned.”
“Why?” she asked. “You and doing the right thing
have never been intimately acquainted. I find it hard to believe
you’d want to make friends with it this late in the game.”
Sante hesitated and swallowed hard. “I can feel the
edge of age insanity. I wanted to dance in your blood just now,
Daria. I lost control. I’ll be dangerous when I go, dangerous to
Ari. If you lock me up now, when I go I won’t be a threat to
her.”
Daria considered him. She’d seen the edge of that
insanity when he’d been trying to strangle her. His thirst to spill
her life into the sand had been readily apparent, so it was jarring
that he was now willing to incarcerate himself to protect
another.
“But please leave Ari alone,” Sante added. “Let her
stay here, give her a portion of my assets to live on.”
She frowned. “We have no charges to level against
Ari. She will be left alone.”
The double meaning of that was not lost on
her.
He bowed his head and sighed.
Daria shifted and stared at the back of his bent
head. “You’re going in not only for the murders of Julia Harding,
Vincent Almeda, Trudy Horowitz, Stephen Miller, and Brandon
Nichols; you’re also going in for distributing carmin, Sante.” She
regarded him for a moment. “And I know you have blood slaves under
this dome somewhere. We’ll find them before this day is
over.”
The murders would put him away for life, but she
wasn’t going to let anything else slide by when she had the chance
to charge him. She’d add as much insult to injury as she could
before the end of the day.
“Care to change your mind?” Alejandro asked.
He raised his head and held her gaze steadily.
“No.”
Not missing a beat, she looked at Alejandro. “Let’s
get the ABI and GBC in here immediately.”
They had no time to waste. Just because Sante was
willing to confess and surrender didn’t mean his people would be.
They were surrounded by three hundred and fifty hard-core
Christopher Sante worshippers.
She started for her dune bike. “We need to get him
out of here as quickly and as quietly as possible.”
Alejandro nodded. “Once we get him back to the
house, we’ll make the calls.”
“I ask one thing,” Sante said. “I’ll go without a
fight, and I’ll keep the others from fighting for me, but I ask you
to allow Carlos to take over management of the Shining Way.”
Daria stopped in her tracks, turned, and scoffed.
“Carlos will just continue the trade of carmin, Sante. That’s not a
deal.”
Sante shook his head. “He doesn’t know about any of
it.” He gave a short, bitter laugh. “I had to hide it from him
because he’d kick my ass if he knew.” He paused. “He’s protective
of me and mine, Daria. To a fault. He is not corrupt. He’s not the
man you think he is.”
None of them were, none.
She considered his words, considered what this
place meant to so many people, people like Jia Ying, Rodrigo, and
Emmet. This was their home, their one safe place in two galaxies
filled with people who feared and hated them.
She licked her lips, hating to give him anything he
wanted. “I’ll research him. If I find out you’re telling the truth,
I’ll see what I can do.”
“Go ahead. You’ll see I am.”
“After I’m certain, we’ll take it from
there.”
It was true that in the initial research into the
histories of Carlos Hernadez and Eleanor Matthews, there had been
few warning flags. There’d been no criminal histories for either of
them, though Carlos’s actions here under the dome made it hard for
Daria to believe him clean. Anyway, Sante’s word was not to be
taken at face value. She would dig deeper.
He closed his eyes in relief. “Thank you.”
“I’m not doing it for you.” The words sounded like
the lash of a whip. “I’m doing it for those who call this place
home.”
“That’s why I want it done, too.” Sante swallowed
hard and averted his gaze from hers. “And Ari. Please make sure
she’s all right.”
Daria started to say, “We don’t owe you any
favors,” and then stopped. “I will protect Ari as much as she’ll
allow me to.” Ari Templeton would hate her with the heat of a
thousand suns by the time this was over. “Whatever I can do for
her, I will.”
“Thank you.”
She turned on her heel and walked to her dune bike.
“Don’t thank me any more. It makes me want to kill myself.”
AS they approached the house, Alejandro watched Ari emerge and run toward them, a smile on her face. “Christopher! Oh, god, I was so scared! Did you find—” Her smile faded and her steps faltered. “What’s going on? Why do you have him cuffed?” She came to a stop in front of them. “Christopher?”
Alejandro had one hand firmly on Sante’s upper arm
and wished for a weapon. Daria walked on Sante’s opposite side, her
expression grim. Sante’s body stiffened in the face of his lover’s
bewilderment.
Guards poured out of the house behind her. He and
Daria both shifted position, ready to fight if they had to.
The men took in the situation from afar—their boss
cuffed and in the custody of two Chosen they’d thought were on
their side less than a hour ago—and moved toward them, drawing
their weapons.
“Sante,” Daria snapped, her body going taut.
“Stand down!” Sante barked. “Guards, I’m giving you
a direct order to follow the instructions of these two officers of
the ABI and the GBC.” He paused and seemed to gather his strength.
“I’m being arrested.”
The color drained from Ari’s cheeks and the angry
forward stomp of the guards died.
“Christopher?” Ari asked again. “What’s
happening?”
Sante studied the ground for several long moments
before he raised his gaze to hers. “I’m doing this because I love
you, Ari. One day you’ll understand. You and I . . . would have
been great, but the timing was bad.” A sad smile flickered across
his mouth. “Turns out I’m too old for you after all, baby.”
Ari shook her head, trying to understand. “Too old
for me?” She rounded on Daria. “What have you arrested him
for?”
“At the moment, he’s being charged with the murders
of five people, plus the smuggling and distribution of carmin. I
doubt that will be all, however. There might be a carmin field
around here somewhere, so we can add drug manufacturing. Plus, I
expect we’ll be including the trafficking of blood slaves to the
list soon.”
If it was possible for Ari to go paler, she did.
“Are these charges true, Christopher?”
“They are, but that’s not the real reason I’m
allowing myself to be taken in. I’m going age insane, Ari. I can
feel it more and more every day. I need to be locked up . . . for
your protection.”
Ari’s face twisted. She leaned in, a teardrop
rolling down her cheek. Her voice shook. “If you did those things,
you deserve to be locked up. I want nothing more to do with you.”
She sniffled. “I don’t even know you!” She turned and ran back into
the house, leaving Sante to sag where he stood.
“Allowing? Did you say you’re allowing us to
take you in?” Alejandro growled. His grip tightened on Sante’s arm,
rage surging through his veins. “Sante, from day one we were taking
you, come hellfire or high water. We never would have backed down.
You allow us nothing.” He pushed Sante forward hard, making
him stumble.
When they reached the clutch of somber, watching
guards, Daria divested two of them of their pulse weapons and gave
one to Alejandro. Then she ordered the men to disperse, and the
three of them entered the house.
Daria cast Alejandro a look as they walked into the
foyer. They were thinking the same thing. How long would it take
for the guards to raise the other men and return? They’d been
ordered by Sante to stand down, but the looks on their faces when
Daria had taken their weapons had been anything but passive. They
would have to make their call and move Sante somewhere else under
the dome to await reinforcements.
The house was filled with the soft sound of Ari’s
tears. Alejandro herded Sante up the stairs and into the living
room with the butt of the pulser he held. Sante’s former lover was
on the couch, curled up in a ball.
Daria stared at Ari for a moment, her expression
sad, then turned to Alejandro and said, “I’ll make the call.”
Ari lifted her head. “You! This is all your fault.
You came here, deceived us, pretended to be my friend. Now you’re
taking away the only man I ever loved.”
“Would you rather have lived in ignorance?” Daria
asked. “Would you rather have continued on, not knowing what a
monster your mate is? Ari, really, is that what you wanted?”
Ari’s lower lip trembled, but she said nothing in
return.
“We came looking for you,” Alejandro added. “Your
father reported you kidnapped. We thought Sante had taken you
against your will.”
Ari’s eyes widened. She sputtered for a moment and
then her face melted into acceptance. “Bastard. He used my
disappearance to fuel sympathy for his cause.” She paused, closed
her eyes for a moment. “I should have expected no less. He sent
that man to kill me, didn’t he?”
“I’m sorry, Ari,” Daria said softly. “I really am
sorry this happened to you.”
“Don’t speak to me. I don’t want sympathy,
especially yours,” Ari snapped in response and turned away, her
sobbing beginning again.
With a heavy sigh, Daria turned and left the room
to summon reinforcements.
Alejandro guided Sante to sit on the couch and
stood near him, one hand on his procured pulser, ready to fire. He
didn’t trust Sante, even if he had surrendered, not an inch, not
with Daria . . . never.
Christopher Sante could say he regretted the
murders all he wanted, and it might even be true . . . a little.
But Alejandro had seen the look in his eyes right before stepping
in to help Daria. Her death would have appeased some black, insane
part of him that demanded death as a tribute to his ego.
Alejandro had no doubt he’d had fun that night so
long ago, fun killing Julia and the others. The man might be
capable of love, sure, but there was a savage portion that
Alejandro suspected Sante had a hard time controlling.
Right now Sante looked far from dangerous. He
slumped on the couch, about seven feet from Ari, looking defeated
and oddly vulnerable. His zipstrainted wrists lay in his lap and
his gaze rested on his sobbing former lover. He stared at her like
he wanted to memorize every inch of her face and body, like a man
knowing he would soon be walking into the desert wanting to store
up as much rain as he could to last him awhile.
Alejandro recognized it, because that’s how he felt
about Daria.
From the corner of his eye, he caught movement.
Daria entered the room, took a seat to the left of Sante, and gave
Alejandro a thumb’s-up. Everyone who needed to be contacted had
been. The calvary was on its way.
By dawn the dome would be swarming with law
enforcement, ABI and GBC alike. This mission would be over, and
Daria would move on, taking a huge chunk of his heart with
her.
He’d move on, too, just like he had the first time
she’d left. He loved her, but he wasn’t going to beg her. The woman
loved him back, but she was too stubborn to see it. Alejandro knew
he couldn’t force her to open her eyes; she had to come to that on
her own.
The truth could be so hard to see sometimes. Ari
Templeton was learning that right now. She deserved the truth,
though. All of it.
“What about the blood slaves, Sante?” The question
fell like a rock into the silence of the room. Daria looked up at
him from where she sat and then studied Sante. “Was Daria right
about that?”
Sante shifted his gaze to the floor. “I’ll bring
you to them.”
A disgusted look passed over Daria’s face. “I knew
it.”
Ari leapt up, her face flushed bright red with
anger. “Why?” She whispered the word. It came out hoarse and
strangled. Then louder, “Why, Christopher? Why?”
Slowly, he moved his gaze from the floor to her
face. “I learned how to manage the carmin and slaves from my blood
mother. It makes money. It keeps the dome running. It provides a
safe home for everyone who stays here. It was a little sin for the
greater good.”
Daria snorted. “A little sin? You call the
enslavement and sale of human beings a little sin? I fail to
see the little and I really fail to see any good.”
Ari didn’t respond, couldn’t respond, perhaps. She
stared at Sante like she’d never met him before.
“Humans are cattle,” Alejandro interjected. “Only
weaker. Right, Sante? That’s what Lucinda used to say. Their value
is minimal and they’re fragile. You have to buy them in bulk and
use them quickly, before they die.”
Ari made a low gagging sound.
“Shut your mouth!” Sante snapped at him.
“That’s it, though, right?” Alejandro pressed.
“That’s the prevailing attitude among many older Chosen.”
“Yes,” he hissed. “If they’re stupid enough to get
themselves addicted they deserve anything they get.”
Ari turned her head away from him and closed her
eyes.
Daria stood. “Well, on that cheery note, let’s
go.”
“Ari should remain,” Sante said softly.
Ari’s head snapped around. “No! I want to see this.
I want to see what you’ve done, Christopher. I have a right to know
all of it.” She stalked out of the room and down the stairs. The
front door slammed behind her.
A few minutes later they mounted two dune bikes.
Alejandro with Sante on one, and Ari and Daria on the other. With
the pale gray fingers of dawn just beginning to spread over the
roof of the dome, Sante led them toward the honey fields. Not a big
surprise to Daria or Alejandro.
They set down in the restricted area about three
miles from where he’d been working with Brandon, in front of a
large metal warehouse.
Two tall, well-built guards snapped to standing
position where they’d been lazing on either side of the door and
picked up their pulse rifles. Once they caught sight of Alejandro
helping the zipstrainted Sante from the bike, they both bristled.
The men glanced at each other and moved toward them, hands tense on
their weapons. Alejandro touched his pulser, set to stun, hoping
there wouldn’t be trouble.
“Stand down,” Sante commanded. “Stand away and let
us through.”
The guards, clearly aching with the desire to
defend their leader, hesitated, but didn’t lower their weapons. A
tense moment passed in which both Alejandro and Daria charged their
pistols, the soft whirring sound loud in the suddenly quiet
air.
“Obey me,” Sante snapped.
The guards immediately stepped away from the door
and lowered their weapons. They clattered to a rest, the pulse
lights at the top of their weapons, keyed to their brain wave
patterns, still violently red. Their boss had told them to stand
down, but they were pissed as hell he was being held and might just
try and play hero anyway. These guards seemed even more likely to
go vigilante than the ones back at the house.
Alejandro glanced at Daria, who gave him a knowing
look. They would have to watch their backs with these guys. If they
were going down, they were going down swinging.
They entered the warehouse and immediately darkness
and stench enveloped them. Beside him, Ari caught herself against a
wall and dry heaved.
Unwashed bodies. Blood. Urine. Fear.
It clung to the inside of their nostrils and curled
into the back of their throats.
Noises filtered to them. Coughing to his left.
Murmuring straight ahead of them. Somewhere to the distant right,
low moaning.
“Illumination,” commanded Sante in a hoarse
voice.
Light flooded the building, making all the humans
in the large area in front of them flinch and cover their
eyes.
But not the Chosen, who had immediate pupil
dilation in light changes. Alejandro and the others saw every
detail right away, in its full, terrible reality. They stood in
horror at the sight before them.
Daria’s only reaction was a quick intake of breath
at the cringing sea of enslaved humanity. There had to be close to
four hundred men and women crammed into the small area, so close
they probably had trouble moving. They were dressed in tatters,
their bodies gaunt from hunger.