Jax held up an arm defensively when Owens turned to him, but the young man batted it aside impatiently. He did nothing but place a hand on the top of Jax’s head, but it felt like the hand reached right into Jax’s brain.
Jax pushed against it, the way Melinda had taught him. Then a blinding, debilitating pain shot through his head. He yelled and staggered backward into Tegan. Clenching his teeth together, he concentrated on not passing out.
The hand was back now, rummaging through Jax’s head as if his brain were a drawer full of disorganized photographs. Invisible fingers teased out exactly what they were looking for, and the memory of being Tasered by Terrance surged upward. Then Jax was handcuffed to the grill in the bank, and Thomas signaled him from the doorway. Jax was forced to remember the day the Donovans had invaded his house, and finally he saw Mrs. Unger’s hallway where he’d sworn himself to Evangeline.
Owens removed his hand. The pain and the forced memories vanished.
“The boy’s newly turned,” Owens said to Balin, “and barely trained. Easily molded at this point. The strongest thing in his mind is his oath to the Emrys girl.”
“Who was he living with?” Balin asked.
Owens hesitated. “A Transitioner using a false name. The boy wasn’t taught to read marks and doesn’t know who he is.”
It took all Jax’s strength of will not to show his relief. At least he’d hidden Riley’s identity. Or had he? Owens hadn’t looked for any memories of Riley, only the ones that explained how Jax had gotten himself into this predicament.
“The boy is as devoted to his oath as you are to yours,” Owens said to Balin.
Balin turned to his brother. “Angus, take the recruits to separate rooms. We’ll move in the morning.”
“Where?” Owens asked. “Where are we moving?”
John Balin walked out of the room without answering.
Jax was locked into an office on the second floor—a room with a metal desk, a swivel chair, and two steel filing cabinets. He sank into the chair, still trembling.
A man who could rip memories from his head was not a good person to have as an enemy. If Owens came back, Jax would have to fight harder. Melinda had told him it was possible to fight off any kind of attack, if the person was ready for it. In fact, Jax had pushed Owens out for a second. Owens had inserted the pain because of that push. Was it a memory of pain? Was that the key to Owens’s talent, then—disabling his victims before looking through their heads? If Jax could ignore the pain, maybe Owens wouldn’t be able to treat Jax’s brain like one of these filing cabinets.
A light tapping made Jax whirl to face the sole window in the room. When he saw who was there, crouched on the ledge outside, he crossed the room and fumbled the lock open. The window frame was stuck from years of grime, but Jax heaved at it.
As soon as the opening was wide enough, Tegan slipped her legs in. The rest of her followed like a limbo dancer. “Are you crazy?” Jax demanded. Then, because he already knew the answer to that, he asked, “Are you escaping?”
“Can’t. They’ve got men with rifles on the fence,” Tegan said.
“Then what are you doing climbing around out there?”
Tegan stared Jax in the eye. “You got between me and the gun.”
“Yeah, well, it was just—”
She lunged at him. Jax put up his hands to fend off an assault, but she threw both arms around his neck and hugged him.
Someone cleared his throat loudly, and they both turned to see Owens standing in the doorway. Jax swept Tegan behind him with a wave of his arm. This is getting to be a terrible habit.
Owens shoved the door closed, his eyes darting from Jax to Tegan to the open window. “You.” He pointed a finger at Tegan and then at the window. “Get back to your own cell, or I really will shoot you.”
Tegan darted to the window and squeezed herself out, reversing the motion that had gotten her in.
“You.” Owens turned his finger on Jax.
Jax braced himself. This time he’d concentrate, no matter the pain. It’s not real. It’s a memory. I can take it.
Owens lowered his hand. “I could say something about your taste in friends, but there isn’t time. I have a message for you.” He crossed the room in two strides and stuck the object in his other hand into Jax’s face.
Jax flinched, expecting a gun, but it was a phone. It took him a moment to focus on the message in the texting box.
Riley: jax you idiot
32
JAX GRABBED THE PHONE and keyed in his most important question.
Miller: melindas kids ok?
He barely had time to register the name preceding the message before Riley answered.
Riley: evry1 ok
Jax glanced nervously at Owens and quickly thumbed in:
Miller: this is millers phone but guy w/me is owens
Riley: miller owens right
Jax groaned at his own stupidity. Riley’s vassal Miller—descended from Sir Owain. Melinda had told him that!
Miller Owens waved his hand at Jax in a hurry-it-up gesture and glanced toward the door. “Keep it short.”
Riley: where is E
Miller: hiding her somewhere. not with me
Miller: i swore 2 her
Riley: quick thinking on her part. kept u alive.
Jax licked his dry lips and ignored the temptation to resort to excuses and explanations.
Miller: what do I do?
Riley: trust miller. im coming
“That’s enough.” Miller took the phone from Jax’s hands, turned it off, and shoved it in a pocket. “I don’t want them catching me with this phone.”
“You’re Riley’s vassal?” Jax couldn’t believe it. This guy had offered to shoot Tegan. He’d rummaged around in Jax’s head, torturing him while he did it.
“Yeah,” said Miller.
“But I heard you say you were Wylit’s vassal.”
“I am. Want me to swear to you, too? No, wait. This’ll prove it faster.” Miller opened one of the filing cabinets and threw a manila file on the desk. He took out his blade and balanced the dagger on his palm. “I swear the loyalty of the Owens bloodline to these papers. I will protect them from harm with the last breath of my body.” Then, with a wild grin at Jax, he flipped the blade into its sheath, located a lighter in one of his many pockets, and lit the folder on fire.
He laughed while he did it.
Jax might’ve been new to the world of magic, but he still felt sick—like he’d seen something unnatural. His oath to Evangeline was the only one he’d ever made, but he knew instinctively that it was impossible for him to betray it. “How—?”
Miller beat the flames out against the desk, his eyes pale gray and dilated behind his wire-rimmed glasses. “An unexpected side effect of a fractured skull. Oaths don’t work on me anymore.”
Jax’s eyes jumped to the patch of colorless hair on the side of Miller’s head. “Does Riley know?”
“Riley was there when this happened to me. He knows I’m free to betray him, and he trusts me anyway. But let me tell you what this means for you, Jax.” Miller gave him a small shove. “I’m not compelled to protect you like he is. If you get in the way of my main objective, I’ll let you sink or swim on your own.”
Jax gulped. “What is your main objective?”
“Preventing the end of the world.” Miller grinned so wildly, Jax didn’t know whether to take him seriously or not. “Specifically, I need to keep Emrys away from Wylit.”
“What does he want from her?”
“He wants her to alter the Eighth-Day Spell.”
“You mean release all the people inside it?” Jax still wasn’t convinced that was a bad thing.