Vengeful (Villains #2)(97)
Dumont rubbed his forehead. “The fifth floor is under renovation. It should be empty. That’s the best I can do.”
Victor hesitated, but the humming in his head was spreading to his limbs. He was running out of time.
“Fine,” he said, “lead the way.”
*
MEANWHILE, ACROSS TOWN . . .
SYDNEY tried to call Victor, but it went straight to voicemail every time.
What did June mean when she said he was in trouble?
They’d been careful. They were always careful.
Do you trust me or not?
In that moment, Sydney had. She hoped she hadn’t made a mistake.
Footsteps sounded behind her. Sydney’s hand went automatically to the gun she now kept tucked in her coat, thumb already resting against the safety.
But then she recognized the heavy tread, and turned to see Mitch striding toward her across the rooftop garden.
“There you are,” he said cheerfully.
She let go of the gun. “Hey,” she said. “Just admiring the view.” She tried to keep her voice light, but her head was still spinning, and she was afraid it would show on her face, so she turned her back on Mitch. “It’s weird, isn’t it? How cities change. Buildings go up, and come down, and it looks the same—and different.”
“Like you,” said Mitch, ruffling her pink wig. The gesture was light, easy, but there was a strain in his voice, and the silence, when it fell, was heavy. Syd’s mind was on Victor, but she knew Mitch’s was on her sister.
They’d never talked about what really happened to Serena. It had been too soon, and then too late. The wound had healed, as best as it could.
But now that they were back in Merit, the finished Falcon Price building glinting in the distance, the air was thick with everything they’d never said.
“Hey, Syd,” started Mitch, but she cut him off.
“Do you ever wish you were an EO?”
Mitch’s brow crinkled, caught off guard by the question. He didn’t answer right away. He’d always been careful like that, sorting out his words before he said them.
“I remember when I first met Victor,” he said at last. “These guys inside were giving me a hard time, and he just . . .” Mitch slid his hand through the air. “He made it look so easy. I guess to him it probably was. But watching it made me feel . . . small.”
Syd laughed. “You’re the biggest guy I know.”
He flashed her a smile, but it was sad at the edges. “Sometimes it feels like I’m in a fight, and all I’ve got are my hands, and the other guy has a knife. But that guy with the knife, eventually he’s going to face someone with a gun. And the one with the gun is going to go up against someone with a bomb. The truth is, Syd, there will always be somebody stronger than you. That’s just the way the world works.” He looked up at the shining skyscraper. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a human versus a human or a human versus an EO or an EO versus an EO. You do what you can. You fight, and you win, until you don’t.”
Sydney swallowed, and turned her attention back to the skyline.
“Any word from Victor?” she asked, trying to keep her voice light.
Mitch shook his head. “Not yet. But don’t worry.” His hand came to rest on her shoulder. “He can take care of himself.”
MERIT CENTRAL HOSPITAL
THEIR steps echoed on the stairs.
“What exactly happens at the apex of these episodes?” asked Dumont.
“Nerve impairment. Muscular seizure.” Victor ticked off the symptoms. “Atrial fibrillation. Cardiac arrest. Death.”
Dumont glanced back. “Death?”
Victor nodded.
“Do you know how many times you’ve died? Are we talking about three to four recurrences or a dozen—”
“One hundred and thirty-two.”
The doctor’s face went slack. “That’s . . . not possible.”
Victor considered him dryly. “I assure you, I’ve kept track.”
“But the sheer strain on your body.” Dumont shook his head. “You shouldn’t be alive.”
“That is both the cause and the crux of our problem, isn’t it?”
“Have you experienced cognitive impairment?”
Victor hesitated. “There’s a brief period of disorientation immediately after. And it’s getting longer.”
“It’s a miracle you’re still forming sentences.”
Miracle. Victor had always hated that word.
They reached the fifth floor, and Dumont pushed open a set of doors. He hit a switch and the lights came on, one shuddering wave at a time, illuminating a broad floor that was indeed in the process of being torn apart and put back together. Plastic sheeting hung in makeshift curtains, equipment covered in white tarps, and for an instant Victor imagined himself back in the half-built Falcon Price building, voices bouncing off concrete.
“There are some exam rooms this way,” said Dumont, but Victor refused to move.
“This is far enough.”
They were standing in the middle of the tangled space. Victor would have preferred a clean line of sight to the exits, but the tarping made that impossible.
Dumont set his things down and shrugged out of his coat.
“How long have you been an EO?” asked Victor.