“Chest. Hands.” He rattles through a list, pointing to each picture. Some of them are obvious, such as the spindly bones of a hand and foot, but others require concentration to see clearly.
“He uses these to perform the alterations?”
“Tailors use them,” he corrects me.
Tailors, like Dante or myself or Erik.
“X-rays give us a basic pattern to work from. They guide the measurement process,” Jax explains.
“What do you need measurements for?” I ask, my alarm building to a frantic pulse.
“Remember the actress who wanted her face back after the play?” he asks.
I nod.
“A Tailor uses measurements to change someone’s features. It’s not always necessary, but it speeds the work along,” Jax says.
“Why are you showing me this now?” I demand. Being in this room gives me the creeps, and it further reinforces the idea that the Guild is using Tailors in their efforts to map and alter. I had been close to going under the Tailor’s instruments in Arras. I don’t like being so close to them here.
“You didn’t look closely enough,” Jax prompts.
I stare closer but it’s still a mass of murky white and spindly bones. Jax’s long finger trails to the bottom of the X-ray I’m studying and I follow it. There’s a mass of meaningless numbers and codes. Measurements of some sort, I assume, but it’s what’s underneath the gibberish that stands out:
SUBJECT: LEWYS, ADELICE
“This is me?” I ask aloud. I’m not really speaking to him, only trying to wrap my head around what I’m seeing.
“You aren’t the only one,” he murmurs. “You deserve to know what Kincaid had in store for you.”
I scan the next image. Valery. Erik. And the next. Jost.
“How did they get these?” I ask loudly. Jax shushes me.
“They don’t have surveillance in here, do they?”
“Would you keep records of your misdeeds on tape?” he asks. “But it’s still not a good idea to yell.”
Good point.
“I don’t understand where they came from,” I repeat, trying to fit the pieces together. “I never agreed to be mapped.”
“Do you think Kincaid’s the kind to ask? This isn’t the first time Kincaid ordered us to drug you.”
“And you did it? Before now?” My fingers jab at him.
“Dante wanted to see what Kincaid was up to.” Jax spreads his hands apologetically and backs a few steps away from me.
Of course Dante would risk me to learn more about Kincaid. It doesn’t even hurt anymore to realize that, not after his attitude about abandoning my mother. But how had I missed it? The dreamless nights, the world fading from awareness to black to light again. I thought I’d stopped dreaming because I felt safe, but now I realize more sinister machinations were at work. Did someone carry me down here at night without me knowing it? But when I stop to think, I remember the strange dots and scratches on my arm that Erik noticed in the speakeasy, and the silvery scar we discovered at the swimming pool. My torn dressing gown the morning after Jost and I broke up. The strange bruise on my leg that Valery pointed out when she dressed me for the play. The clues have been there. Kincaid’s men weren’t even careful enough to prevent them, and still I hadn’t seen them until now. That didn’t answer the most important question though.
“Why?”
“What?” Jax asks.
“Why would he do this? What’s his endgame?”
“Kincaid is twisted,” he says but there’s discomfort in his voice. He has no more idea than I do. Jax is another cog in Kincaid’s machine, but he feels the creepy, sinister implications in the X-rays, in this room. Whatever Kincaid is up to isn’t benign.
“What else do you do here?” I ask.
“We do the alterations,” Jax says, hesitating a moment. “And this is where Kincaid gets his renewal patch.”
“That’s how he’s still alive, isn’t it?” I ask. “What are these patches?”
“He uses donor threads to keep from aging,” Jax says. “We take the time strands from other people and insert them into Kincaid’s own thread.”
“Donor implies willingness,” I mutter.
“There’s nobody more willing than the dead,” Jax says.
I recall the bright time strand I spotted within Kincaid. Was it the one pulled from Deniel after he attacked me? It doesn’t matter. It is despicable and unjustifiable however Kincaid came by it. Is this how Cormac and the other Guild officials stay alive too?
“We need to tell Jost and Erik,” I say, heading to the door.
“First, we have to take care of something more important,” Jax says. He gestures to the privacy screen, and my heart sinks into my stomach. He pushes it to the side, revealing Dante, unconscious, lying on a table. An IV runs from his arm, and a mask regulates his breathing.
“What happened to him?” I breathe.
“He’s sedated,” Jax tells me.
“Wake him up,” I cry.
“It’s not that easy—”
“Wake him up!”
Jax fumbles through the cabinets and emerges with a vial of liquid. He sucks the medicine into a long syringe and takes a deep breath.
“Hold his arms,” Jax orders me. I do as I’m told. Before I can ask him what he’s planning to do, Jax slams the syringe into the center of Dante’s chest. The effect is instantaneous. Dante’s eyes fly open and he gasps against the mask covering his face. I pull it off him and he stares at me in confusion.
“It’s okay,” I say.
“Ad?” It’s the only word I can make out. Dante’s words are confused, a jumble of consonants and vowels.
“We need to go,” Jax says. He offers Dante a hand, while I gently pull the IV needle from his arm. “We’ll explain everything in a minute.”
“We need to get to Erik and Jost,” I say, wrapping Dante’s other arm over my shoulder to help steady him.
Dante pushes us away. “I can walk.”
Jax and I exchange a concerned look, but we let Dante walk. I stay close to him in case he stumbles, but he doesn’t head for the door. He trips his way to the next privacy screen.
“There’s someone else in here,” Dante says. “I got glimpses between doses.”
“Who?” I ask, moving to push away the screen, my heart pounding in my chest.
“It’s Valery,” Dante says, beginning to tremble.
“The drugs are messing with his system,” Jax says, grabbing a scratchy white blanket to place over Dante’s shoulders.
Valery lies sedated behind the other screen. A bag drips nutrition into her arm, but from the look of her skeletal form, she’s been here awhile.
“How long has she been here?” I wonder out loud. I can tell from the sallowness of her complexion that this is more than a couple days of sedation. I barely recall Kincaid mentioning Valery was going on the mission.
“She never left the estate,” Jax says in disgust. “Kincaid lied to us. It took me a few days to piece together what was going on down here, and then I had to convince someone to let me in on the job. Kincaid doesn’t trust me, he knows I’m too close to Dante.”
“I’ll get her. She won’t be able to walk on her own,” Jax adds.
“And then what?” I ask, beginning to feel the familiar panic crawling through my skin.
“You need to get your friends and run,” Jax says.
“They’ve got the whole place on lockdown,” I argue. “There’s no way we’re getting out of here.”
“Don’t worry about that,” Jax says. Despite the seriousness of the situation, he winks at me.
“Jax is an expert at causing a commotion,” Dante says weakly.
“You’re going to distract them?” I guess. “How do you plan on distracting Kincaid’s whole security force?”
“With a very big boom.”
“And then what?” I ask. “Where will we go? We have no—”