Anarchy Found (SuperAlpha, #1)(24)



“No,” Atticus says. “No. He has no interest in the details. He just wants this to stop.”

I can’t say that I blame him. “OK, well, thank you for your help and the heads-up. I have to get back to security, but I’ll be working on this today.”

“There’s going to be more.” It comes out at a statement. “There’s going to be more and there’s no way to stop them.”

I don’t even have time to ask what the hell that means, because he walks out the door and a few seconds later the outer lab door opens and the first responders come inside and begin cataloging the scene.





Chapter Fourteen - Lincoln




“This is a mistake,” I say to my reflection in the mirror. I flatten down my hair, trying to make the unruly mess conform into some semblance of respectability. Then I scrub my hand across my newly clean-shaven chin, already missing the days-old stubble I usually find there. “She’s a cop. She’s been with Blue Corp all week for an investigation. She’s gonna figure me out if we play this wrong.”

“You need to get out of this cave,” Sheila says from the main cavern. This is my room and there are no optics in here for Sheila to project herself into her holographic form. I did that on purpose. No one wants a hovering nag in their bedroom. So she stands just outside, ready with an answer for my misgivings. “And you’re a partner.”

“A silent partner,” I growl, still pissed off I had to shave. “Which means I don’t have to show up for shit like this. I don’t have to play nice, or pretend to care, or any of those other things that Case has to do. That’s why he takes an extra five percent. I pay that f*cker to do this shit for me.”

“The detective will be useful once things start happening, Lincoln. You need to make her acquaintance tonight.”

“And what if she recognizes me?” I walk out and stare her in the face. “What then? What if the drugs didn’t work? What if they wore off? What if—”

“Then it would be optimal for you to be there when that recognition happens, don’t you agree? If she wakes in the night and remembers what happened, what do you think she will do the next day?”

“If she sees me tonight and starts to remember, we get the same ending, Sheila. She’ll get on the phone to her boss and have me arrested. I’ll be in jail and then the whole f*cking thing is blown. Someone will have to come bail me out. And you certainly can’t do it. You’re a f*cking lightshow. Case can’t do it, he’ll be implicated. Thomas…” I laugh. “Well, f*cking Thomas wouldn’t do it. So who the f*ck is gonna bail me out if she catches on? This is so beyond stupid.”

“I think,” Sheila says, turning her back to me and walking over to the engineering lab door, “you just proved my point. How useful would another friend be? And a detective, at that?” She turns back to me and smiles. “And don’t insult me with the remarks about the lights. I’m working on it.”

“Working on what? And since when is calling you a lightshow an insult? That’s what a hologram is.”

“I’m not a hologram, Lincoln.” She lifts her chin and crosses her arms. A gesture that resembles defiance and hurt.

I sigh. “I know that better than anyone, Sheils. Remember?” She tries not to smile, but she can’t help herself. “I built you first.”

“You did,” she concedes. “And it’s a good thing too. Because if it wasn’t for me you’d be all alone in this world.”

I nod in understanding. She’s right. But I’m right too. “She’s gonna figure this stuff out, Sheila. I have a bad feeling about things tonight. I’ve been running on luck for fifteen years and now that everything is starting to happen, that luck is about to run out.”

“Then make friends with her, Lincoln. You don’t really have a choice, anyway. She has a place in all this. You know that. Molly is the missing piece you’ve been waiting for.”

She’s not though. She’s the one piece I’ve been counting on never coming back. And now that she is… well, my days are numbered. “I’m taking the bike tonight. The old bike.”

“It will mess up your hair.”

I laugh. “Like I care.” The old bike isn’t the one I wrecked last weekend. The old bike is the one my dad used to ride. Nothing flashy on it. And it’s not ever been connected to Sheila. So it’s a punishment of sorts. For her making me go in the first place. I know she’s interested in Molly and was probably hoping she could eavesdrop, if only from the periphery. But not gonna happen, you bossy little lightshow.

I’ll go, because I do need to figure out if Molly Masters is getting some of her memory back. And I could use another friend, although how Sheila thinks Molly will forgive me after what I did to her is beyond me. But… if Molly is going to remember, it’s better that I be there for it. Talk her down. Calm her down. Manipulate her into staying quiet, and maybe, if I’m lucky, into seeing the big picture.

Thomas is Thomas. And whatever his reasons for coming back with a bang are, they’re not anything I can control. He does what he does, when he does it. He’s always been that way.

But everything else feels a little too much like luck running out.

And if she does remember what I did to her… well, I don’t want to think about that yet.

J.A. Huss's Books