“So I see. Then amaze us all away from here. This place is evil.”
Jack led them out. Miller had been moved down the ramp now, and Reaper stood behind his wheelchair, looking for all the world like someone taking a sick friend for a walk. His hands rested on the chair's handles. Miller looked scared, but defiant.
“Where are they?” Reaper asked.
“Here,” Jack said. He jumped down and lifted Emily down to the ground, then held out his hand for his mother.
“Daddy!” Emily said. Their mother did not speak, because she already knew the truth.
“Where are they?” Reaper asked again. He had barely glanced at his family, and as the other freed prisoners started climbing down, wincing against the dusky light, he virtually ignored them all.
“Fleeter's getting them,” he said. “Mum said there are two left.”
“Only two,” Reaper said. He looked down at the wasted man before him, and Jack thought he was going to destroy Miller there and then.
But Miller was a man for whom survival had become an art.
“You're all going to die,” he said. He looked at Jack, then down at Emily. “Every single one of you.”
“And you'll be the first,” Jack said. He drew the pistol. It seemed fitting, somehow, to kill this murdering bastard with a bullet instead of a special power.
“Er, Jack?” Sparky said. He was standing to one side, and Emily dashed to him and hugged him, seeking refuge.
“Jack,” Reaper said. “This one doesn't die.”
“Won't killing him be the victory you want?” Jack asked. He pointed the gun at Miller's face. The man's smile barely wavered.
“Kill? If you think that means anything anymore, you really don't understand what London has become. No, like I said…this one doesn't die.” Reaper rested a hand on Miller's shoulder, and the mutilated man's smile fell at last. “I get to play with him some more.”
“What do you mean?” Jack asked Miller. “What's happening? What have you done?”
“Fail-safe,” Miller said. “Big Bindy.” He laughed again. “I named it myself. Bindy was my wife, and she was big, and she was…destructive.”
“Tell us,” Reaper said.
“Who's Big Bindy?” Scryer asked.
“She's a bomb designed to destroy what's left of London,” Miller said, frowning as he gushed the truth. “A nuclear bomb. Buried. Fifteen megatons.”
“Where?” Scryer asked.
“I don't know,” he said. “They don't let anyone into London who knows. I'm just…”
“Expendable,” Reaper said. “Like all of us.”
“None of you are expendable,” Miller said. “You're already spent. Dead people walking. You're memories, and no one outside will miss you when you die, because you're already dead.”
“You'll die too,” Jack said. “If they blow the bomb, you'll all die.”
“It doesn't matter anymore,” Miller said. “I've just pushed the button. Tick-tock, Jack. Tick-tock, tick-tock…”
“Reaper!” Fleeter called from the doorway, excited. “They're drugged and tied.” She look at Jack, surprised that he was still there.
Puppeteer climbed up next to her and entered the darkness, and moments later two people floated out through the doorway, lowering gently to the ground. A man and a woman, they were bound in heavy chains, limbs tied behind them, gagged, and their skin was pale and slick. They both looked dead, but Jack knew better.
“Who are they?” Jack asked.
“Friends,” Reaper said. He knelt beside the prone woman and touched her face, and one of her eyelids flickered open. Her eye was a startling blue, and her breath misted the air.
“And what can they do?”
Reaper ignored him. “The others?” he asked Fleeter.
It was Miller who answered. “We cut them up. Dissected their brains. Threw their remains out for the wild dogs.”
Reaper tensed, his face thunderous. “You should leave,” he said to Jack. “All of you.”
“Dad—”
“This is no place for you.”