Lifeblood (Everlife #2)

“Good news. You’ve found one. I’ll be her Barrister.”


His eyelids narrow to slits. “That is the very reason I planned to find a Barrister before speaking with you. I knew you’d volunteer.”

“I’ll fight harder than anyone else. I’ll—”

“No, Miss Lockwood. You won’t.” He leans down, getting in my face. “This is part of your problem. You think you’ll fight harder than anyone else, because you love her. The truth is, we all fight our hardest for all Troikans and all possible Troikans, because we love them all. We need you fighting Penumbra, not court cases that could get you killed.”

Pop. The air deflates from my anger, and I push out a breath. “You’re right. I’m sorry.”

A confused pause. Then he nods and straightens, smoothing his hands over his lapels. “I am. But I didn’t expect to get through to you so quickly.”

“Maybe Killian is a good influence on me?” I ask cheekily.

He tweaks my nose, but says nothing more.

“Is it time for my debriefing?”

“Only with me.” With a tilt of his chin, he urges me forward. “Tell me everything.”

I relay everything I said to Brigitte and share what Killian revealed: the reason for Victor’s abduction, and the results.

“The spy is good,” he says on a sigh. “There’s been no suspicious behavior among your team.”

“Maybe we’re looking in the wrong place. What if the spy is higher up? Someone with full clearance, who can access our feed and study our cases with zero redactions.”

He frowns. “One of our Generals?”

I despise the thought, but why not?

We enter and exit a Gate. In the Capital of New, the streets are congested with citizens headed to training or work or home after a night shift. Everyone who spots us stops to bow. Even Elizabeth and Raanan.

Nico is with the redheaded twins who were friends with Archer, and Hoshi and Rebel are leaving a manna restaurant. Levi nods at everyone, and I mimic him, doing my best to appear oh so chill, even though I want to shout, We’re equals! Stop bowing.

I also want to shout, Vote for Archer! No, no, vote for Meredith! No, wait. Vote for Archer! The Resurrection approaches, and Troika could really use a third Conduit.

“The Conduit who died this year,” I say. “What was her—his?—name?”

“His. Orion Giovante. A good man. Strong. Brutally honest. A little hotheaded. A warrior who preferred to lead his army on the ground rather than from behind the scenes. He refused to leave wounded soldiers in battle and died trying to save them.”

He sounds amazing. “We really need him, don’t we?” I ask softly.

“We really need five more Conduits.”

Not an option right now. Unless... “If Myriad can make Abrogates, why can’t we make Conduits?”

“If I knew the answer, Miss Lockwood, we’d already have more Conduits.”

We take a Stairwell to Levi’s neighborhood. At his house, I leave my Shell by the front door, knowing he will beam it to my apartment later. Note to self: learn to beam. We go straight to the playroom. Jeremy and Millicent are stacking blocks. Or, more accurately, Millicent is stacking and Jeremy is knocking down.

Jeremy spots me, squeals and crawls toward me. Crawls!

“Dude. You’ve grown leaps and bounds overnight!” I’m so proud I could burst.

“He’s strong and wise,” Millicent says with a grin.

I pick him up, carry him to the toy box and sit down with him in my lap. Golden sunlight streams through the oval window, stroking us both as he selects a squeaky ball for us—nope, he rolls the ball away from me and giggles.

Millicent excuses herself, granting us privacy, and Levi shuts the door. He leans against the wall, his arms crossed. “I’m sorry to report I’m stumped by Lina’s warning. My one certainty is that you are the mouse.”

The subject change throws me, but I rebound quickly. “Yeah. I figured. Maybe the henhouse is Troika? I’d guess my apartment, but henhouse suggests more than one hen, and I live alone.” I scrub a hand down my face. “Maybe I should visit Lina again.”

He winces. “I received word she asked to be released. We had to let her go. We couldn’t violate her free will.”

My first instinct is blast him for failing to inform me the second he found out. But honestly? I should be grateful he told me anything at all. He doesn’t owe me information. As a General, he must deal with thousands of subordinates and all their loved ones and friends.

More than that, he suggested I go see Lina days before I agreed to do so. Had I gotten my butt in gear sooner, I could have spent more time with her. I could have had a second chance to talk to her about going to court.

“Where is she?” I ask.

“Good question. Not with Myriad, I don’t think. They would have tried to use her against you.”

True.

He gives me a half smile. “I think you’ll be safest in your apartment. Your team can stay with you. I’ll station men and women I trust in and around the rest of the building.”

I don’t want anyone endangered on my behalf, but I also know preparation can mean the difference between victory and defeat. “All right. Yes. Thank you.”

He blinks at me. “What’s with you today? What happened to your stubborn refusal to obey orders?”

“I’m not stupid. Not all the time,” I add with a grumble. I kick out my legs and tap my shoes together. Tap, tap, tap. The rhythm sooths me. “Aren’t you tired of this war, Levi?” I am, and I’ve only been part of it for a few months. “I crave peace.”

“Victory matters more than fatigue,” he says, offering no more.

“Have the realms ever attempted peace talks?”

“No. Why would we? We can’t exist in harmony. We want the same prize—humans—and only one of us can win.”

“Sharing is caring.”

“To share with Myriad, we must compromise. When we compromise we lose the essence of who we are.”

Tap, tap, tap. “I’m going to prove you wrong, Levi. I’m going to fight for peace. One person at a time.”

His brand glows. “Do what you feel you must.” He checks the message, and his good mood fades. “I’ve had a group of TLs following Brigitte since she left the café. They were ambushed by MLs, and our injured are returning.” He waves toward the door. “Go to the Sanatorium. Today’s training will come from the Healers. You need to better understand their job.”

Eager to help, I blow Jeremy a kiss and head out. Light strokes me, warms and fills me. I inhale deeply, exhale slowly and try to push the rays through my pores. To warm and fill others.

The rays fizzle, and my disappointment is keen.

I spend the next few hours at the Sanatorium, doing whatever my Healer—Dawn—tells me. And for the most part, my patients are kind and grateful.

Then I enter the last room on the second floor.

Elizabeth is perched on the edge of a gurney. She’s wearing a bra and a pair of panties, and there are gashes all over her.

She’s hemorrhaging, being drained of Light.

This is going to be fun.