There, she said in his mind.
Jack could see that she was getting worse. That did not concern him now. It would help when the time came.
“We don’t need to get too close,” he said.
She was looking at him wide-eyed. “I’ve brought you as far as I can,” she whispered. “I can’t stay here, Jack. I know you must, and I won’t change that. But what I have is too precious and it has to be preserved.”
“No.”
“Yes. It has to be spread.”
“No! It’s not precious. It’s poisonous. And you’re staying here with me.”
Every scrap of her illness—the weakness, the blood, the distant glaze to her eyes—vanished in an instant. She seemed to expand as she took in one huge breath, and Jack wondered at the effort and energies it took to drive down that sickness.
“Nomad—” he began, but then she turned and ran for the doors.
He followed. The bomb behind, Nomad in front, both were terribly destructive, but Nomad was probably worse. The bomb could end London and all the history of that great character city. Nomad, and the contagion she carried, would change the world. Some of the change might be good, but the possibility was too great that much of it would be bad. In London she had been her own person, but out there in the wider world, she would be precious. Sought-after. Jack tried not to imagine Nomad weaponised. He tried not to imagine an army of a thousand Reapers.
She shoved at the doors and they flexed in their frames, creaking and breaking. Jack dipped into her mind and broke her link with the doors. She stumbled forward, as if a great barrier had been removed before her.
“You’d dare enter my mind?” she asked.
“Please listen to—”
Nomad shimmered and Jack flipped just as she did. He recovered from the familiar shock just in time to catch a fist to his face. A real flesh and blood fist, knuckles grinding across his nose and opening wounds that had only recently stopped bleeding.
He dulled the pain that melted into his skull, skipped through the universe she had planted within him, and then that red pulsing star of contagion seemed to expand and surge at him, seeking his touch and the gift of release. It exuded both vigour and sickness, and he veered away.
But it had given him an idea. Inside him was this alien thing, and inside Nomad there might be something similar. Or someone.
As Nomad smashed open the doors and they spilled to the floor, Jack knelt behind her and concentrated hard. She’d raised a much heavier barrier, but she still did not quite understand that everything she could do had also been given to him. He circled the barrier, observing, and then drove down and into it, hauling himself through. Before she could do anything he was drifting into her own universe of potential.
The shock at entering her mind almost froze him. Her place of talents was so different from his. It was colder, for a start. The stars more distant, the spaces in between so vast, more hollow, more empty. There was no personality to this place, and that made finding what he wanted that much easier.
He sought the personality she had once been.
Jack excavated. Unearthed the truth she had kept buried for so long. Freeing who she really was. He touched the star and let it burst, and its light flooded Nomad’s subconscious. When he pulled out and drew back from her, readying for another attack, preparing to defend himself if what he’d tried went wrong, it was not only Nomad slumping to the ground before him.
Angelina Walker was a part of her once again.
She looked up at Jack with haunted eyes.
“You’re staying with me,” he said, and before she could react he stole her breath until she fainted away.
Jack used everything he had to venture closer to the tank. He mapped the trip wires and lasers in his mind, forming a three-dimensional understanding of where they were, and then sought out the other traps. He moulded a space of motionless air around motion detectors, levelled the temperature around body heat detectors. Paused by the inner doors, wondering what he might have missed and probing inside the tank with all of his human senses, and many senses that were far from human.
The bomb was in there, hot and heavy. The tank was welded shut.
“Angelina,” he said. The woman was leaning against the wall beside him, eyelids fluttering, leg twitching. “Is there anything else?” He brought her up out of her faint.
She was scared, shivering, useless. She would be no threat to him as she was now, but neither could she help. This was all on him.
“We’re going closer,” he said. “I have to be as close as I can. Come with me.”
Everything was still, and quiet, and as far removed from London as he had been in days. He stared at the terrible display of war machines, portraying both beauty in form, and ugliness in their intended purpose. Each one told a story now lost to the dark mists of long-finished wars. And yet each story still resonated, because Jack felt the influence of the people who had manned these machines. He had a duty to them as well as to everyone left alive in London. He had a duty to the world.
“What did you do?” he asked Angelina, not expecting an answer. But she gave one anyway.
“Only my best,” she said.
“You can help me put everything right,” Jack said. “I’ll sleep, but I need waking every few minutes. You can do that. You have to.”
Angelina nodded, and he saw no deception in her. He would have to trust her.
They moved closer until they were only a few feet from the tank, and then they stopped. They sat down slowly, Jack checking all the time for lasers he hadn’t seen, pressure pads or trip wires hidden in shadows. But he knew that they were safe, for now. With the powers he had, he knew.
He could sense the bomb inside, a terrible weight. And he knew the time was close.
“Lucy-Anne dreamt of Nomad and the bomb,” Jack said. “I have to do the same.” He closed his eyes and started breathing deeply, falling into his universe and then passing through an unknown place into Nomad’s stranger, cooler mind.
And he dreamt of Lucy-Anne.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
ZERO
“Shit,” Sparky said. “Maybe they are going to machine-gun us after all.”
They were halfway across the Exclusion Zone, and facing them was a wall of lights. They could see the movement even from here, hear the engines. Several helicopters buzzed overhead, but they couldn’t tell whether they were military.
But they had already seen groups of people ahead of them disappearing into the bustle at the edge of the zone, and there was no gunfire. They had little choice. Lucy-Anne knew that Jack could not dream the bomb back forever.
“Time?” she asked through her damaged mouth.
Sparky glanced at his watch and kept staring for a while, as if trying to make sense of something. “It’s almost midnight,” he said.
“He’ll do it,” Jenna said. “For as long as he can, he’ll do it.”
Lucy-Anne had an arm around each of their shoulders, three friends so close. If only their fourth was not missing. She felt as though she’d left a limb behind, and several times crossing the bombed and burned Exclusion Zone she experienced a mad compulsion to rush back into London to be with Jack. She knew where he was. She might even get there in time.
“Almost there,” Sparky said. “But don’t these people know what’s happening?”
“Maybe it won’t reach this far,” Jenna said.
“Yeah, but it’s still close.”
“Lots have left already,” Breezer said. “I’m hoping this is the last of them. Others might have gone in different directions, but everyone my people were able to contact were told to come this way. There are some who refused to leave London. And probably many more we don’t know about, deep down in the tunnels, hidden away.”