My mind had barely had time to register what had happened. Uri's eyes were already rolling into the back of his head when the sound of the shot - and that zipping noise of the bullet racing past my head - smashed into my eardrums. His legs started to buckle beneath him as the centers of his brain responsible for muscle control were violently introduced first to the bullet and then to the charred concrete wall behind him. Blood, skull fragments, and brain matter splashed wetly into the wall; the metallic scent of blood filled the air in a heartbeat.
Olena just stood there, frozen in a mix of shock and panic.
The anger, the suspicion, the blinding fury that, only a moment ago, had threatened to overwhelm me with that urge to punish Uri for all his transgressions blinked out in an instant.
They weren't replaced with concern or shock, and my mind wasn't changed by a sudden realization of this new reality; there simply wasn't enough time for that. One instant, it was there, and the next, it was gone. It was like a switch had been flipped, and everything my mind had been so convinced of less than a second earlier was just gone.
The impact of the bullet had snapped Uri's head back, but the momentum of that violent movement had jolted the rest of his spine forward, and his body started to tip toward me. I reacted without even thinking about it.
I reached out, and I caught him.
As soon as my hand made contact with him, existence melted away.
********
The sky was burning.
Literally burning.
A huge gash had been ripped through the heavens, a tear in the fabric of this reality.
Darkness had descended on the perpetual summer day of the mindscape as I faded into Uri's city. There were no stars in the deathly night sky, just that burning tear and forks of lightning that seemed to rip back and forth between the edges of that flaming abyss and occasionally smash down into the city below.
Fire rained down from the sky, and the heavens themselves seemed to have shattered, chunks of Uri's mind, burning embers of... him... fell onto what must once have been a city of marvelous beauty, crushing anything and everything it landed on.
His hospital, a large building close to the center of his city, was a blazing inferno; smoke and fire billowed out the windows, and I watched as the westernmost wall started to crumble and collapse. With a lurching, crunching cacophony of crashes, the rest of the hospital collapsed with the western wall into the street. The last of Uri's ability to heal himself was gone, reduced to nothing in a cloud of dust and smoke. Yet even as the smoke and the debris was blown out around the falling building, I could see bits of it bouncing off a shield erected around his library. The repository for his memories and his knowledge was - somehow - still standing, and still being kept safe.
It took a few horrified moments of watching for me to realize that I was standing on the balcony of Uri's office, his version of my bunker, his "Nexus," as he called it. Just like in my own city, the balcony - on the upper floors of his once impressive Palace - was the best seat in the house when it came to the view. But instead of a breathtaking panorama laid out before me, I was watching the literal destruction of a man's mind after the damage done to it by that bullet.
Uri was dying... in very, very slow motion.
Each fragment of him that fell from the sky, each burning building collapsing and crumbling into nothing, each bolt of lightning smashing violently into his city, and every single passing second was literally my watching the end of him.
This wasn't Henry. This wasn't even me after the accident. There was no way to undo this level of catastrophic damage. No matter how powerful I was, no matter how miraculous my ability to heal, there was nothing I could do.
His marketplace, the building at the center of his city responsible for the major bodily functions like his heartbeat and breathing, was on fire. I could only watch in muted horror as a segment of the sky itself, trailing fire like a falling star, broke away from the terrifying vista, meteored toward the ground, and smashed into it with an earth-shattering jolt that shook the whole city. The marketplace, and the last slim hope for Uri's survival, was crushed out of existence.
"I always wondered what it would be like," Uri's voice spoke from beside me. I hadn't even realized he was there. "The end, I mean. Having your own death drawn out to such lengths should be its own form of torture, but in this case, I am grateful for it."
"Uri... I..." I turned to face him. Words were already failing me, but he held his hand up and shook his head, a soft smile pulling at its lips.
"It's okay, Pete. It was my fault."
"But..."
"We don't have a lot of time," he interrupted my argument. "There are things you need to know before it is too late. I know you are not the traitor; I always knew that."
"Then why...?"
"Because you have been infected by him."
"I... What?"
Uri signed. "Do you know what you did to Toussant? How you took a piece of yourself and forced it into his mind?" I nodded. "Well, the traitor has been doing that to almost everyone, just on a much smaller scale. He has put a part of himself into as many people as he could; that... influence... it corrupts people. It affects their loyalties, or at least their perceptions; it completely diverts suspicion away from him and onto someone else. In your case, it diverted your suspicions onto me. If I had told you what you wanted to know, you would have been compelled to pass that information on, and I couldn't risk
him
finding out."
I just blinked at him. I'd had good reason to suspect Uri, though, lots of them... Didn't I? Everything made so much sense when I had it in my head. Uri
had
been acting suspiciously, or... evasively... or... secretively. Fuck! there was something about the logic of it that now made a hell of a lot of sense. The instant that bullet had hit him, those doubts, the questions, the suspicions, the absolute conviction that he was the enemy, and the marrow-deep
need
to destroy him just... vanished. Instead of the utter loathing I had felt while being inside the mind of the broken Toussant, a man I
knew