Hancock Center, shredded by Mogadorian blaster fire and barely clinging to life. I used my healing
on him, praying that it would work. Even though he’s better now, I’ve still been keeping an extra-
close eye on him, probably because the fates of so many of my other friends are unknown.
‘There,’ Sam replies, pointing.
At one end of the room, against a wall covered with competing graffiti tags, are a trio of industrial-
size laundry bins overflowing with piles of khaki pants. It’s at the summit of one of these piles that Bernie Kosar rests, the antics of Biscuit and Dust seeming to tire him out. Despite my healing, he’s
still weak from the fight in Chicago – and also missing a jagged chunk from one of his ears – but with my animal telepathy I can sense a sort of contentedness coming off him as he watches the other
Chimærae. When BK sees us enter, his tail thumps fresh dust clouds from the pile of old clothes.
Sam sets down Stanley, and the cat trundles over to the clothes piles with BK, settling into what I
guess is the designated Chimæra napping zone.
‘Never thought I’d have my own Chimæra,’ Sam says, ‘much less a half dozen of them.’
‘And I never thought I’d be working with one of them,’ I reply, my gaze settling on Adam.
At the center of the factory floor, steelwork benches are bolted into the floor. Sam’s dad, Malcolm,
and Adam are setting up the computer equipment they just purchased by trading in some of my waning
supply of Loric gemstones. Because there’s no electricity running to this old factory, they had to buy some small battery-powered generators for the trio of laptops and mobile hotspot. I watch Adam
hooking up one of the laptop batteries – his deathly pale skin, lank black hair and angular features
making him slightly more human looking than the usual Mogadorians – and remind myself that he’s on
our side. Sam and Malcolm seem to trust him; plus he’s got a Legacy, the power to create shock
waves, which he inherited from One. If I hadn’t seen him use the Legacy with my own eyes, I’m not
sure I’d even think it was possible. Part of me wants to believe, maybe even needs to believe, that a
Mog wouldn’t be able to just steal a Legacy, that he has to be worthy. That it happened for a reason.
‘Look at it this way,’ Sam says quietly as we walk over to the others. ‘Humans, Loric, Mogs …
we’ve got like the first meeting of the Intergalactic United Nations over here. It’s historic.’
I snort and step up to the laptop Adam has just finished connecting. He takes one look at me and
must detect something – maybe I’m not doing such a good job concealing my conflicted feelings –
because he looks down and steps aside, making room for me and moving on to the next laptop. He
keeps his eyes fixed on the screen, typing quickly.
‘How’d it go?’ I ask.
‘We got most of the gear we need,’ Malcolm replies as he fiddles with a wireless router. Even
with his beard starting to get majorly unkempt, Malcolm looks healthier than he did when I first met
him. ‘Anything happen here?’
‘Nothing,’ I say, shaking my head. ‘It’d take a miracle for the Garde in Florida to track us down.
And Ella … I keep hoping her voice will pop into my head and tell me where they took her, but she
hasn’t made contact.’
‘At least we’ll know where the others are once the tablet is hooked up,’ Sarah says.
‘With the gear we bought, I think we can run a hack on the John Hancock building’s phone
network,’ Malcolm suggests. ‘That way, if they try calling in from the road, we can intercept the call.’
‘Good idea,’ I reply, plugging the white locator tablet into the laptop and waiting for it to boot up.
Malcolm pushes his glasses up his nose and clears his throat. ‘It was Adam’s idea, actually.’
‘Oh,’ I reply, keeping my voice neutral.
‘That is a good idea,’ Sarah chimes in. She scoots in next to Malcolm and starts working on the third laptop, giving me a look like I should try saying something nice to Adam. When I don’t, an
awkward silence settles over the group. There have been a lot of those since we left Chicago.
Before it can get too weird, the tablet boots up. Sam peers over my shoulder.
‘They’re still in Florida,’ he says.
There’s a solitary dot for me on the tablet, pulsing on the East Coast, and then miles to the south are the four dots for the surviving Garde. Three of the dots are bunched together, basically overlapping
into one glowing blob, while a fourth is a short distance away. Immediately, scenarios for that
isolated dot begin cycling through my head. Was one of our friends captured? Did they have to
separate after they were attacked? Is that Five apart from the others? Does that prove he’s a traitor, like in my vision?
I’m distracted from these thoughts by the fifth dot on the tablet, literally an ocean away from the
others. This one hovers over the Pacific, its glow a little dimmer than the rest.
‘That must be Ella,’ I say, my brow furrowing. ‘But how –’
Before I can finish my question, Ella’s dot flickers and disappears. A second later, before I can
even process my panic, Ella blinks back to life, now hovering over Australia.
‘What the hell?’ Sam asks, staring over my shoulder.
‘It’s moving so fast,’ I say. ‘Maybe they’re transporting her somewhere.’
The dot disappears again, then reappears at an impossible point over Antarctica, nearly off the
edge of the tablet’s screen. For the next few seconds, it flickers in and out, bouncing across the map. I smack the side of the tablet with my palm out of frustration.
‘They’re scrambling the signal somehow,’ I say. ‘We’ve got no chance of finding her while it’s
like this.’
Sam points to the others clustered around Florida. ‘If they were going to hurt Ella, wouldn’t they
have done it already?’
‘Setrákus Ra wants her,’ Sarah puts in, looking at me. I had told them all about that nightmare scene
in D.C. and Ella ruling alongside Setrákus Ra. It’s still hard for any of us to believe, but at least it gives us one advantage. We know what Setrákus Ra wants.
‘I hate to leave her out there,’ I say grimly. ‘But I don’t think he’ll harm her. Not yet, anyway.’
‘At least we know where the others are,’ Sam insists. ‘We need to get down there before someone
else …’
‘Sam’s right,’ I decide, driven by the sinking feeling that one of those dots could blink out at any
moment. ‘They might need our help.’
‘I think that would be a mistake,’ Adam says. His voice is tentative, but there’s still enough Mog
harshness to make my fists clench from reflex. I’m not used to having one of them around.
I turn to stare at him. ‘What did you say?’
‘A mistake,’ he repeats. ‘It’s predictable, John. It’s a reactionary move. This is why my people
always catch up to you.’
I can feel my jaw working, trying to form a response, but mostly I just want to punch his face in.
I’m about to take a step forward when Sam puts a hand on my shoulder.
‘Easy,’ Sam says quietly.
‘You want us to just sit around here and do nothing?’ I ask Adam, trying to keep my cool. I know I
should hear him out, but this whole situation has me feeling cornered. And now I’m supposed to take
advice from a guy whose species has been hunting me for my entire life?
‘Of course not,’ Adam replies, looking up at me with those coal-colored Mogadorian eyes.
‘Then what?’ I snap. ‘Give me one good reason we shouldn’t go to Florida.’
‘I’ll give you two,’ Adam replies. ‘First, if the rest of the Garde are in danger or captured as you