Our Dark Duet (Monsters of Verity #2)(46)
Henry stepped up beside them. On the screen, the door at Kate’s back swung open and Soro strode in. When the Sunai glanced up at the camera lens, their gray eyes registered as a smudge of black. Kate’s voice echoed through his head. He’d been two blocks away when she’d screamed his name. If he’d been any later . . .
“I should have been the one to question her,” said August.
Henry brought a hand to his shoulder. “You’re not objective.”
He shrugged off the touch. “Soro nearly killed her.”
“If you didn’t know Kate, would you have spared her?”
August stiffened. “That isn’t fair.”
Fair? chided the voice in his head. A sinner is a sinner.
But it wasn’t that simple. Not when it came to Kate. She was his past. A reminder of who he’d been, who he’d wanted to be. Of school uniforms, and fevers, of starving and stardust and— “Well then. Let’s begin.”
He dragged his spiraling mind to a stop as the mic flared to life and Soro’s voice filtered through.
“What is your name?”
Kate tipped her head a fraction. To everyone else, it might have registered as boredom, but August knew she was turning her good ear away from the Sunai.
“Katherine Olivia Harker,” she answered. If she was afraid, she was doing a good job of keeping it off her face. She tapped the cuffs with a nail. “Are these pure metal or alloy?”
“How old are you?”
“Do you really need to establish a baseline, when you know I can’t lie?”
“Answer the question.”
“Eighteen. I was born at three in the morning on a Wednesday in Jan—”
“Are you the daughter of Callum Harker?”
“Yes.”
“Are you afraid?” asked Soro.
“Should I be?”
“You are a sinner,” said Soro.
“If that’s a question,” said Kate, “then you need to work on your inflection.” August shook his head—some things really hadn’t changed—but Kate only straightened in her seat. “You’re new. What’s your name? Sorrow? That’s what August called you, right? Not very uplifting is it? Are these too many questions? I know you have to tell the truth.”
“As do you,” countered Soro. “Why did you leave Verity six months ago?”
Kate paused a moment before answering—a display of will. “Call me crazy,” she said slowly, “but I just didn’t feel very welcome anymore. Not after my father tried to kill me.”
“And why did you return?”
That question struck a chord. “I tried to tell you,” said Kate. “I’m hunting a monster.”
At August’s side, Henry tensed.
On the screen, Soro inclined their head. “What kind of monster?”
Kate shifted in her seat. “I don’t know.”
“What does it feed on?”
“Violence? Chaos? Death? I’m not sure. It doesn’t kill with its own hands. As far as I can tell, it convinces its victims to do the job. It turns people against each other.”
August started. Squad Six. He looked at Henry, but Henry had already taken up his comm, issuing a low and steady stream of orders.
On the screen, Soro continued their interrogation.
“Describe this monster.”
“I can’t,” she snapped, shaking her head. “It’s a shadow. An outline of something you can’t see. It doesn’t feel—real. It’s a nothing, an absence—”
“You are not making sense,” said Soro.
“You’d understand if you saw it.”
“And you have?”
“Yes.”
“And you know it’s here?”
“I tracked it from Prosperity.”
Soro’s eyes narrowed. “There are no monsters in Prosperity.”
“There are now.”
“How does it hunt?”
“I’m not sure,” said Kate, “but it seems drawn to violence. It amplifies it.”
Soro crossed their arms. “How did you track it?”
Kate’s poise faltered. “What?”
“You said this monster ‘doesn’t have a real body,’ so how did you track it?”
August watched Kate take a breath—buying seconds to bend the truth?—before she answered. “It left a trail.”
On the feed, Soro sounded skeptical. “And you followed it all the way back to Verity. How valiant.”
Kate’s expression darkened. “I guess I have a vested interest. Or maybe I was homesick. Or maybe I could tell, from a territory away, that things were going to absolute shit.” Her temper was rising. “This thing, whatever it is, I’ve seen what it can do. It gets into people’s heads, and it brings out something dark. Something violent. It turns them into the monster. And then it spreads. Like a virus.” She rose to her feet, leaning forward across the table. “So yes, I came back, to help you kill it. But by all means, leave me chained up here instead.” She sat back down. “Happy hunting.”
Kate’s chest was rising and falling, as if the words had left her winded. Soro’s poise didn’t waver. They said nothing, and August knew they were waiting to see if their influence would draw out anything else. At August’s back, people were talking, comms were buzzing, the rise and fall of voices and feeds. But his attention was leveled on the screen, on Kate’s face.