“Then come with me,” Renford said. “You’re in danger, too. You’ve betrayed the ITA as much as I have. But I can get us out of here.”
“No,” Sierra said again.
Renford looked close to exploding. The veins on his neck were popping out, and sweat ran down his forehead. “You traitorous bitch.”
“I am what you’ve made me,” Sierra said. “Just like you.”
“No, you’re not,” Jeth said, flashing a glare at her. He understood that Renford had the power to hurt her with his words, even now. “You’re nothing like him.”
“You stay out of it.” Renford shifted his grip on Cora. “Then again, maybe you’re just what I need.” He turned the gun on Sierra, but looked at Jeth. “I may not be able to harm Cora, but there’s nothing keeping me from shooting her.”
“You won’t,” Jeth said, fear expanding in his chest.
“Oh, yes, I will. And you’ve no hope of returning fire. Not unless you’re willing to hit Cora.”
“You raised her, like a daughter,” Jeth said.
“She was only ever a project. A failed one at that.”
Jeth risked a glance at Sierra, but she didn’t react. She stood as still as if she were welded to the floor, same as the furniture surrounding them.
He turned back to Renford, hoping to catch him at a standstill, but Renford was still moving. Jeth struggled to keep his focus as frustration built inside him. He could feel the seconds passing. The ITA would be here soon. He reached for that calm place, the one that would let him see the shot and take it.
“Let me go, and I’ll let her live.” Renford took a step forward.
“No,” Jeth said, feeling the calm stretch over him. He began to see the pattern in Renford’s movements. He could almost track it. Predict it. Just a few more seconds.
Renford sneered. “You’re so stubborn. Just like your idiot mother. Marian never knew when to back down either.”
The calm Jeth had achieved shattered, and his hand began to tremble. Pain throbbed in his palm from holding the gun steady for so long. “What did you say?”
“Oh, that’s right. You probably don’t remember her well enough to know, do you? But trust me when I tell you it’s true. Marian Seagrave never possessed a single iota of selfpreservation. She’s lucky she’s even alive.”
“Don’t talk about my mother.”
“Why not? It’s only because of me that she didn’t get herself killed by the ITA. You should be thanking me.”
Jeth gritted his teeth so hard a lightning strike of pain flashed across his vision. “What are you talking about?”
A hideous grin stretched across Renford’s features, his eyes glinting with that perverse pleasure Jeth had seen there before. “She came to me for help, you know. When she and your father first returned from the Belgrave. We were friends once, both starting our careers with the ITA at the same time. We even went through the basic training class together. Of course that was before I became an Echo, back when I went by the name Charles.”
A rushing sound filled Jeth’s ears, making him dizzy as a vision of his mother flashed in his mind. I tried to get a message to Charles, he heard her saying. Said he would help . . . he’s not the person I thought he was.
“My mother asked you for help,” Jeth said, his hatred for the man writhing and snapping inside him like a live wire.
“Yes, that’s right.”
“You betrayed her.”
“I did what was necessary.”
Jeth’s whole body shook. It was all he could do to keep from blasting Renford. Only the risk to Cora held him back.
“She trusted you.”
“Be careful, Jeth,” Sierra said. “He’s baiting you.”
Jeth knew it, too, but there was nothing he could do to stop it. He couldn’t even dismiss it as a lie. He’d heard his mother say it.
“Yes, she trusted me,” Renford said. “But not enough to give me the location of Empyria. If she had, things would’ve turned out differently for her.” He paused. “But at least I have Cora now instead.”
As if the sound of her name had called to her in her sleep, Cora began to stir. Renford tightened his grip on her, panic in his eyes again.
Sierra took a step forward. “Let her go.”
“No!”
Cora’s eyes slid open, and she began to struggle automatically.
“Stop moving,” Renford hissed. He’d been holding her in one arm for too long, his grip weak. He jammed the barrel of his gun against Cora’s cheek, and she cried out.
All the air escaped Jeth’s lungs as he envisioned Renford’s hand slipping on the trigger. Cora pushed against him, her limbs wriggling.
Finally, impossibly, Jeth saw it. The clear shot. In his effort to still her, Renford had stopped moving.
Jeth inhaled, quick and shallow. The calm came at once, the patience his father had taught him, the surety and confidence of a well-honed aim.
Jeth slowly exhaled as he pulled the trigger.
CHAPTER
35
THE BULLET BOOMED OUTWARD, STRIKING RENFORD between the eyes. Then it sailed onward, leaving a trail of blood and brain matter chasing after it.
Renford seemed to fall in slow motion, taking Cora with him. She landed on top of him, cushioned by his body. Cora rolled off him at once and began to wail.
Jeth stared in horror at the sight of his little sister soaked in the blood of the man he’d just murdered.
The noise of the door being wrenched open sounded behind Jeth. He spun as Vince, Lizzie, Flynn, and Shady came through it. In the brief moment before the door closed again, Jeth saw more than fifty soldiers in the kid center beyond. The real ITA had arrived.
They’d come for Cora.
Defeat pressed down on him. They’d come so far only to fail now.
Vince wrenched the control panel beside the door off the wall, sealing them in and the ITA out, at least for the moment.
“Is there any way out of here?” Shady shouted over Cora’s sobs. Nobody answered.
Jeth just stood there, numb with shock. He kept seeing the bullet hit Renford. Kept seeing him fall. Vince ran over to Sierra, who was kneeling beside Cora, trying to calm her as her distress worsened by the second.
“We’ve got to get out of here,” Lizzie said. “Sierra, is there a way?”
“Shhhhh,” Sierra said, stroking Cora’s hair. She seemed to be in a daze, too.
“Sierra!” Lizzie said.
Sierra shook her head. “They sealed the emergency exit when they moved Cora in here.”
Cora’s cries turned into screams, the sound terribly familiar. Jeth drew a breath, remembering what had happened on the Donerail. The realization of what was coming snapped him out of his stupor. He took a step toward Cora, gaining control of himself. “Cora—”
She backed away from him, her wide, tear-reddened eyes fixed on his face. She was afraid of him. Of course she was. He’d just killed a man right in front of her. An ache far deeper than muscle flourished inside his chest.
“Step back, Jeth,” Vince said. Jeth did so, reeling with guilt.
Sierra reached out and pulled Cora toward her, embracing her in a tight hug. “It’s okay, Cora. It’s okay. You’ve got to calm down. Remember what we talked about?”
Cora pulled away from Sierra, her expression confused.
The soldiers were banging on the door now, threatening to break through.
Cora’s screams grew even louder, the terrible noise like something being rent alive.
“Calm down, Cora. Calm down,” Sierra said.
Something like an electrical charge began to swell inside the room. Cora’s shrieks seemed to pierce Jeth’s skull. He dropped to his knees, the gun slipping from his fingers. He bent over, hands pressed against his ears, trying to block it out. Around him the others were doing the same. Except for Sierra, who was trying in vain to calm the now-hysterical Cora.