Welcome to Chapter 14.
A quick thanks to my amazing editing team. Your grasp of the English language allows these stories to be what they are. Thank you to the rest of you for your comments, feedback, and high ratings for each chapter as well, not to mention a huge thank you for your participation on the Discord server.
Now, on with the story.
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I couldn't bring myself to check in with Uri when I arrived back home.
I know I was supposed to, but I was pissed off. More than that, the revelations uncovered in Malaga had seriously knocked my already diminished trust in both him and the organization he represented. The fact that he wanted me to report to him
only
, a concept that seemed perfectly reasonable when I was just looking for a mole, suddenly sounded very suspicious based on everything I had learned. My mood was hovering somewhere between dark and brooding and downright homicidal.
Meeting Uri in my current demeanor had a high probability of turning ugly.
I had no doubt he would be waiting. There was no question that, despite his resistance to my plan of action, he was as interested in its results. I didn't think he was pacing the floors waiting for me to get in touch, and I seriously doubted he was even remotely concerned about my welfare. I simply had the information that he wanted. Not that I cared; neither he, nor anyone else in the Conclave, would be getting it until they answered
my
questions to
my
satisfaction. That was not going to be a small ask.
What I needed was time to process. Time to let this new information percolate and settle. Time to come up with a plan.
Of course, life never quite works out that way.
"Pete! Where the fuck have you been??" Charlotte shrieked as I walked through my apartment door. Leaping to her feet from her place on the sofa, hurtling across the room, and flinging her arms around me.
As inordinately happy as I had always been to see her, my mood had me fighting the urge to ask what she was doing here. The answer was obvious. I hadn't seen my strawberry-blonde friend since the morning after the party, I hadn't messaged her more than a handful of times since then, and as soon as I had left the country, I had turned my phone off. As far as she was concerned, I had disappeared from the face of the earth. As for how she got in, she was an Evo. The lock on my front door would barely have slowed her down.
It was instinct, it was a product of my absolute distrust, but I quickly scanned through her mind as secretly as possible. There was nothing. No signs of deception, no ulterior motives, only genuine concern. She was worried about me. It had started a few days ago; she had called, only to be repeatedly put through to my voicemail. It had steadily grown since then.
The person you are calling is not available...
After days of unread messages and dozens of times hearing that phrase down the phone, she had grown to
hate
that synthetic woman's voice. She had dropped subtle questions to Becky and Philippa whilst at work. Neither of them knew about our friendship, so she couldn't outright ask them about me, and she was absolutely certain they didn't know what had happened at the party. But they hadn't heard from me either. In an act akin to desperation, she had just come over. When I hadn't answered the door, she had feared the worst. She had let herself in, honestly expecting to find my lifeless body hanging by the neck from the rafters.
She had never experienced a bonding herself, but she had heard the tales of one half of a bonding pair passing away, even through natural causes, and the other being so consumed with grief that they had committed suicide just to escape a pain that they knew would never ease. Human love was a powerful force, but an Evo bond was unbreakable. Except by death. It didn't just leave an Evo with a broken, irreparable heart; it could shatter their minds as well. Two joined cities suddenly being ripped apart, two halves of a whole being separated forever. It was enough to make even the strongest of characters choose death over the indescribable pain.
Finding my apartment empty, she had just sat and let the panic overtake her. She had scanned for me, as far as her abilities would reach. Hundreds, thousands of miles worth of minds, just looking for mine. That activity was strictly forbidden in the Sect. As far as they were aware, that was the easiest way to attract Inquisitor attention. It
wasn't
, I had stood in a room with 200 of them and scanned them all from a few feet away, and none of them had noticed a thing. It had taken an extraordinary amount of power for them to acknowledge my presence. Besides, she wouldn't have found me if I had been in the next room; I had been blocking since I left the country. She hadn't known that and had taken the risk anyway.
I felt the tension, the anger, the mistrust, and the suspicion melting away as I wrapped my arms around her and hugged her into me.
"Where have you been?" She repeated, her voice quivering slightly in relief. I could feel her heart racing through her chest as it pressed into mine. Charlotte loved me; she absolutely, unquestioningly loved me. Not in a romantic way, not in a sexual way, but it was a deep, profound friendship, the sort that made me as close to her as family. The thought of anything happening to me was too much for her to bear.
"I... It's a long story," I sighed back. "I'm happy to see you."
"Pete, please," The relief was starting to erode the adrenaline that had been coursing through her veins, and her tears were starting to wet my shirt as she trembled in my arms. "What is going on? It feels like I'm losing you."
"You're not losing me," I said softly. "I love you. You are all I have."
"I love you, too," she sobbed, pulling me closer. "Please talk to me."
"I want to, but... It's a lot."
"Tell me, please. I