"How about you, boy?" Vale asked. "Have you been tortured before?"
Milo didn't answer. Didn't seem to react at all, and I wanted to know what he was thinking. He'd been beaten as a child, and he'd been wounded as a Triad Hunter. But torture was another animal altogether, something not really understood until it was experienced. Milo had suffered so much these last two months already.
"I'm the only one with the information you want," Marcus said.
"You're right," Vale replied. "But you know as I do that some things hurt much more than physical pain. And this human smells like you, Marcus. Why is that, I wonder?"
Milo's shoulders flexed. Marcus moved toward the bars, only to be jerked back by the collar around his neck.
Good God, that must have been some kiss, if Vale still smelled it.
Vale snapped his fingers. Goon turned the crank, and the chain yanked Milo right off his feet by the neck. Milo gasped and grabbed the chain with both hands. The collar lifted from behind, putting the curve of metal directly over his windpipe. Vale lunged forward and punched Milo in his unprotected midsection—the perfect blow to make his lungs seize up and knock the wind out. Milo's face flushed bright red. He coughed and sputtered and couldn't seem to keep his grip on the chain.
Marcus roared—a terrible sound more animal than man. I wanted to scream and yell, too, to make them stop hurting my friend. To make them hurt me instead. I'd heal. I always did. Milo didn't have my healing powers, and I'd already lost so many friends.
All I could was watch, and somehow that hurt more than any physical blows that Vale could have landed.
The moment seemed to last for hours, though in truth was probably only a minute or two. But when you can't breathe—when you're watching a friend who can't breathe and you can't do anything to help—even a minute is an excruciating eternity. Vale finally gestured at Goon, who released the slack on Milo's chain. Milo hit the floor hard and rolled onto his side, away from us, coughing and gasping.
Vale stepped out and closed the cell door. "Think about it a while, Marcus," he said. "You're quite alone here, and I can make his death last for days."
"I will kill you with my bare hands, Vale," Marcus said in a voice so deadly it sent chills down my spine.
"Who's the one in a cage, Jaguar?"
Vale and his goon exited without loosening our chains, leaving Marcus, Baylor and I no choice but to stand there.
"Milo?" I said.
His reply was a fierce grunt. He raised his right hand and gave a thumbs-up, but didn't turn to face us. He just laid there, panting.
"I'm so sorry," Marcus said. His voice was a whisper, but sounded incredibly loud in the silence of the prison. I'd never heard him so unsure of himself.
"Not your fault," Milo rasped out. He rolled onto his back, then sat up. His face was still red and he looked like he wanted to vomit. "I know you won't tell them anything. You can't."
"He'll kill you."
"Maybe." Something sad passed across Milo's face. Sad and determined. "But the future of your people is more important than me. More important than any of us."
Marcus's hands clenched into fists. He looked like he wanted to disagree. He didn't, though, because Milo was right.
"Can you tell how many Felia are in the building?" Baylor asked. Leave it to Cerberus to get us back on point.
"I can detect three distinct scents, including Vale and Peck." Peck must equal Goon. "Both have been in contact with Truman recently too, because I caught his scent on them."
Which really meant nothing—they could have killed Wyatt as easily as locked him up somewhere in the building.
"Anything useful about our location?" Baylor asked.
"Not much," Marcus said. "No traffic sounds, so we aren't near a highway. There are odors of rot and disuse, but nothing distinctive."
"This is some kind of lockup area," I said. "Wyatt and I were held here once before."
"You were?"
I explained it for Marcus's benefit, as much as Milo and Baylor, who had some idea of this part of my past. I'd been on the run from the Triads at the time, during what seemed like a different life altogether. "Are there any old jails or precincts that this could be?" I asked Baylor.
"Several, actually," he replied. "Depends on what part of town we're in. I'm surprised you never went looking for this place."
"It never seemed important, what with everything else going on." Vale's earlier animosity toward Marcus came back. "Marcus, why does Vale hate you so much? It seemed more personal than Riley."
Marcus growled, low and deep. "It is personal. Prentiss? The Bengal who kidnapped Keenan?"
"And was executed by the Assembly. Yeah, I remember him."
"Prentiss was Vale's brother."
Fantastic. A whole family full of crazy, treasonous tigers.
"So this is revenge?" Baylor asked.
"In all likelihood. Vale's personal revenge is tangled up with his fanatical need to unseat my family from our position of power within the Pride."
"That's comforting." Even Baylor could be sarcastic once in a while.
"Sooner or later, our absences will be noticed. Our friends will search for us."
"Who else knew about the message under the bridge?" I asked.
"Gina and Astrid knew," Baylor replied. "But Vale isn't completely stupid. He won't leave any clues behind, and scents are difficult to detect there with the river and highway so close."
"But they'll start looking."
"For five people in a city of half a million?"
I didn't answer. I had to stay optimistic about our chances of escaping alive, and Marcus beating down each argument wasn't going to help. Let him be Mr. Negativity. I had to find Wyatt and make sure he was okay. I had to know what Vale did with the elf scroll and the medicine pouch. Most importantly, I had to get that cure to the vampires as soon as possible. None of that could be accomplished while dead.
Somehow we all had to stay alive.
With no way to measure the passage of time, I could only guess at how many hours I stood at the end of my taut chain while Milo was tortured. I couldn't do anything but remain present—checking out or turning away felt like abandoning him. I wouldn't do it. Baylor and Marcus didn't either, even though the silver collar around his neck was making Marcus feverish and unsteady.
The first time Vale and Peck came back, they cuffed Milo's hands behind his back and then choked him unconscious. Before they left, Vale asked Marcus for the security codes. Marcus told him to fuck off. Not long after Milo woke up, they were back with a wooden cane.
Each sharp thwack of the wood against the backs of Milo's legs echoed in my brain like shrill whistles—harsh and painful. Stretched by his neck onto his tiptoes, Milo couldn't avoid the blows. Couldn't do anything except take them until his legs gave out. Fat tears rolled down my cheeks as I cried silently for his agony—agony I knew too well and desperately wanted to take away from him.
"Your family is so smug," Vale said during his fourth go at Milo. "The Danes think themselves kings of the Felia when you're anything but."
"We've always been fair," Marcus replied. "You came at us first when you kidnapped Keenan."
"Perhaps, but you drew first blood the day you killed my brother."
"He was judged by the Assembly and executed according to our laws."
"You turned him over. You and Astrid and that human fool. You're all responsible."
The name Prentiss rang in my head from last night's conversation in the cafeteria. This wasn't only about leading the Pride. This was personal for Vale, which meant he was being ruled by his emotions. Emotional people made mistakes.
Milo's chain had been loosened enough to allow him to kneel. His back, legs and arms were a mosaic of welts and blossoming bruises, with the occasional stripe of drying blood. Sweat trickled down his face and chest. He didn't seem quite aware of what was happening, as if he'd gone deep inside of his own head where the pain couldn't touch him.