Then Torble stuck out his tongue and gave Tom’s burn a slow lick.
“Sorry. Couldn’t help myself. But it is delicious. You’ll also be able to taste it for yourself, when I use the branding iron on your lips.”
Torble went back to the stove, and Tom felt a scream welling up inside. A scream, if let out, would continue until his voice was gone.
“Mr. Torble, you’re needed immediately.”
Dr. Forenzi had come back into the room. He appeared agitated.
Torble’s eyebrows furrowed. “What for?”
“We have some intruders, and they’re causing some problems.”
“How about all your super military killing machines? Why don’t you get them to help?”
“Everyone is helping, Mr. Torble. Now please come with me.”
Torble blew Tom a kiss, then followed Forenzi out of the room.
Tom let out a sob, and then considered his options. As far as he could tell, he only had one. Try and use his feet to pull one of his IV tubs out of the dialysis machine, and then hopefully bleed to death before Torble returned.
A pretty shitty option. And though it was preferable to being tortured to death with a branding iron, Tom wasn’t quite ready to give up yet. Where there was time, there was hope. If there were even a slim chance he might get out of there alive, and see Joan again, he had to take that chance. Even if it meant days of unbearable agony.
What the fuck am I thinking?
Tom kicked out, grabbing the tube between his toes, yanking it free. Then he began to hyperventilate so his heart beat quicker, pumping blood out of his body at a faster rate. If he got lucky, he’d be in hypovolemic shock before Torble returned.
“Tom!”
He looked at the doorway, and saw Moni, Frank, and Sara.
“Oh my god,” Moni cried. “You’re bleeding all over!”
“Good thing you got here in time,” Tom said. “Hurry up and cut me down.”
No one had a knife, but Tom told them his original idea of burning the rope with the branding iron. Moni was able to untie his hands and remove his IVs, and Dr. Belgium offered him heroin.
Tom demurred. “I’m good, Frank. Where are the others?”
“We lost Deb. Mal went off to find her.”
“Okay, we look for them, then get the hell out of here.”
Much as he loathed it, Tom took the branding iron as a weapon, and they crept out into the hallway so search for survivors.
Fran
Woof took the lead, sniffing down the hallway with Mathison jockeying him, and Fran followed two steps behind. She’d mounted a flashlight on the rail of her AR-15, lighting the way as they pushed into the bowels of Butler House.
The house was creepy, that was for sure. Mal and Deb continued to contribute snippets as to what had gone down that night, and Fran was happy she’d missed that particular party. She also wondered what possessed these people, who seemed smart and capable, to come here in the first place.
Then again, Fran and her family had shown up as well. Better prepared, perhaps, and playing by a different set of rules. But Fran came here to exorcize her past demons same as the Dieters did. She just brought bigger guns.
Woof stopped, growling. The dog could track, but hadn’t ever learned to point. That was okay, because Mathison did point, directly at a hallway door opening up.
Fran dropped to one knee, giving Josh a clear shot over her head.
A man stepped into the hall and faced them. Tall, thin, wearing a dirty white jacket and holding a leather bag and some sort of saw. Like the four-armed man in the great room, he also had eyes that were completely black.
“Colton Butler,” Mal said.
Fran shivered, memories of Safe Haven pushing into her head, of the fear and helplessness, and then she returned to the here and now and sighted the target’s head.
“Drop the weapon,” she ordered. “We have real bullets.”
Colton Butler rushed at them.
Fran wasn’t sure who made the head shot, her or Josh, but the wannabe ghost went down in a pink mist of blood. When he hit the floor, the top of his skull gone, what was left of his brains spilled out like a tipped bowl of oatmeal.
Fran had experience trying to kill enhanced psychopaths. They didn’t die easily. But that was so simple it was almost unfair.
“They can hear, right?” Fran asked.
“I think they’re on a drug that eliminates fear,” Deb said. “That’s what they’re making here.”
Fran got up from her crouch. A drug that eliminated fear. On one hand, something like that could be a huge benefit to mankind. On the other, Fran didn’t relish the idea of an entire army made up of kamikaze pilots and suicide bombers.
She changed her magazine, snapped her fingers, and Woof continued to sniff his way down the hall.
“Entrance to the tunnels is up ahead,” Mal said.
Woof was already on it, scratching at the door and whining. Fran opened it, illuminating the stairwell.
“It’s a maze down there,” Mal told her. “We’ll need a string to find our way back.”
Fran hadn’t packed a string, but she and Josh each had a sack of reusable road flares. She took one out, flipped the switch, and dropped the red light on the top stair.
“I got point, Woof.”
The dog looked at her, wagging his tail, and Fran descended the stairs first. Rather than the expected basement, Fran found herself in a tunnel. She dropped another flare and whistled for Woof. Once again the beagle took the lead.
“Time?” Fran asked.
“Duncan is thirty seconds late,” her husband answered. Fran listened to her walkie-talkie click three times—their signal for Duncan to respond.
There wasn’t an answer.
“Duncan, come in,” Fran said into the radio.
Her son didn’t reply.
“I’m going,” Josh said, turning around and breaking into a run.
“Mathison!” Fran said. “Find Duncan!”
The capuchin monkey hopped off Woof and scrambled up the stairs, faster than Josh could move.
“Duncan, are you there?” Fran said again.
Still no answer.
Fran’s mind tortured her with nightmare scenarios. She and Josh had fought over whether to bring Duncan along or leave him in Hawaii. They’d ultimately decided to take him in case those fake feds came back. Fran figured she could better protect her son while she was with him, instead of him being home alone.
But now she regretted that decision more than she’d ever regretted anything. Could someone have taken her son? Could someone have hurt him?
Killed him?
“Duncan, it’s Mom. Please answer me.”
Then the radio exploded in Fran’s hand, and three more bullets peppered her back and she fell to the ground.
Duncan
The scalpel poked at Duncan’s bulletproof vest, four times in rapid succession, and then Duncan lashed out to swipe at his attacker and got stabbed in his palm.
He recoiled, batting at the blade blindly, and then something was in his lap, something Duncan recognized instinctively, and when he reached for it his hands locked around the waist of a monkey.
Mathison?
No. This primate was bigger by a half, its fur different, rougher. Duncan grabbed tight and pinned it to the steering wheel, hitting the van’s horn. In the glow of the van’s interior light, Duncan saw this was a much different animal than Mathison was. Besides being larger, it had huge, red eyes, almost like a lemur.
The monkey screeched, poking with the scalpel, digging it into Duncan’s forearms.