"Evie...? What... What are you doing here? Where is...?"
My mind swirled around inside my head, a million different thoughts all fighting to be heard over each other. I took a few staggered steps backward under the shock of what my eyes were seeing.
"
I don't understand,"
Jeeves's disembodied voice almost whispered inside my ear.
"She... She shouldn't be here. She should be at home. I... I don't... Something is wrong.
To my perception of the passage of time, it had been years since I had seen Evie, even if it had only been a few weeks to her. Her fabulously mysterious mind had been one of the things that had drawn me so strongly toward her, how different she was from every other human I had ever met. But these differences had made her very hard to track with the computer software. It had regularly mistaken her for an Inquisitor. She had also proven incredibly difficult to read without being in direct physical contact. But still, Jeeves had been certain, absolutely certain, that she was safe at home.
"I don't know; I don't know," Jeeves intoned to himself as he frantically tried to get a handle on the maelstrom of thoughts swirling around him. "No, I couldn't read her, but we have been watching her house. She hasn't left there all day. No Inquisitor teams came for her, and she didn't leave... she shouldn't be here! What IS she doing here? And where is Becky??"
Her eyes were looking at me wildly, her face streaked with tears, her hair was messed up, and the gag that had been tied around her head and pulled tight into her mouth was chafing the skin of her cheeks. Her eyes looked hollow and gaunt, filled with panicked fear and, oddly, suspicion.
Her eyes widened as I tentatively reached forward, untying the gag from around her head and letting it fall loose. "Pete, behind you!" She almost screamed.
I spun around in time to catch the metal bar being swung at the back of my head. My fist clamped onto it tightly as I glared at the man holding it. The sadistic, evil, self-congratulatory grin on his face quickly faded as my fingers squeezed, crushing and bending the hollow metal scaffolding pole like it was a paper straw. A flick of my other hand released the bindings that had tied Evie to the chair, and she scrambled to her feet, cowering fearfully for protection behind me.
"Jean-Pierre Toussant, I presume," I growled at him, my voice, once again, layering over itself as I stepped forward, forcing him to stumble backward a little.
"Abomination," he snarled in return as I started to effortlessly push him back.
By this time, the fire burning above us was now raging completely out of control. The entire roof of the warehouse was on fire, and pieces of burning wood, thermal insulation, shards of broken roof tile, and chunks of masonry were raining down around the room like a downpour of molten flame. The air was thick with acrid smoke, and the heat of the room, even without my input, was starting to rise to dangerous levels.
The concrete that wrapped around the support columns was starting to crack under the heat, and the entire building groaned against the loss of its structural integrity. But Becky was still here; I could
feel
her, and there was no way I was leaving without her!
With a simple twist of my wrist, the bar that both Jean-Pierre and I were holding swung around like a gate on a post. The man lost his grip on the end of it as the centrifugal force launched him into one of the support columns. I was on him in a heartbeat. His feet had never resumed their contact with the ground, and the law of gravity seemed to cease applying to me as I threw myself across the room and drove the scaffolding pole through his shoulder. Pinning him to the pillar several feet above the ground. There was no cry or howl of pain, not even a grunt out of the Inquisitor, he just kept growling at me, leaning forward to get his face as close to mine as he could reach.
His eyes burned with hatred; mine burned with fire! I barely registered the gasp of fear from Evie as my pupils erupted into the same searing hot flame that the beast had hunted me in my dreams. This was a man who was convinced that I was the devil incarnate; well, I would show him the beast that he had created. Gone was my restraint, gone was my concern, and gone was the last shred of my mercy and decency. There was only
fury!
Faye's death had crushed me, but even I could appreciate that she wasn't the main target, that her life ended for the same reasons as so many others had; she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. This was different! These animals had specifically and intentionally targeted people with no involvement in this life or with this war, and they had done it just to get to me... There was not a single cell or neuron in my body that even considered showing mercy anymore.
"Yes, Hellspawn! Show me your true form!" The man yelled above the roar of the inferno around us, almost gleefully goading and stoking the fires of my anger. Spittle shot from his lips with each enunciated word. "You will never find her in time; she will pay for your crimes! She will be purified by God's holy fire, and her involvement in your sins will be cleansed from her soul before she is sent to the Almighty for judgment!"
"WHERE IS SHE?!?" I roared at him with such force that the column against which he was pinned cracked violently behind him.
He just laughed. Unlike his now-dead colleague, there was no involuntary flick of his eyes. There was only his determination to win this battle of wills between us.
Evie was trying her best to cross the gauntlet of falling, burning debris that rained down from the fiery rafters, trying her hardest to get to me. The building was coming apart. Parts of the roof caved in on the left side of the room, the parts of the wall that had been blown away by the energy bolt were starting to collapse inward, and the collum opposite the one I had pinned Toussant to cracked in half and started to disintegrate under the weight and heat forced onto it.
She screamed as a few tonnes of rubble crashed into the ground next to her. "You have twenty seconds to tell me what I want to know, or you will be subjected to a pain you can scarcely imagine!" I growled at Toussant before leaping down onto the ground. Evie shrieked again as she saw me land in front of her, her eyes locked onto the flaming orbs that had replaced mine. "What... What are you?" she asked with a trembling voice.
"Running out of time," I snapped back. I grabbed her wrist and pulled her into my arms before running for the exit. Jeeves seemed to understand what I was doing, and my telekinetic powers batted away any falling debris that threatened to hit us. In only a few seconds, we were outside.
"Stay here, don't move!" I barked at her, waiting for her to nod mutely before turning back to the warehouse. I had to take a moment as my eyes wandered quickly over the blazing inferno in front of me. The building was not going to last long, and Becky was still inside. There was no way that Toussant was going to tell me what I needed to know. I needed to find her myself.
I launched myself forward, the power-infused muscles in my legs carrying me as fast as they could through the flames and the smoke of the burning building. I picked up Becky's mind immediately; she was deeper into the structure. I couldn't feel any difference in her elevation compared to me, so I doubted she was on the upper floor. I just ran. I covered the few hundred yards between the buckling double doors to the corridor, where the men had been crushed by the catwalk, in a matter of seconds.
"Still ahead. Run. Faster."
The soles of my sneakers were starting to melt as the heat of the fire started to burn into the ground beneath my feet, I could feel the clothes on my back smoldering as I charged headlong through the flames.
"
Still ahead."