all.
He didn’t understand how she could do this—cover her traces so thoroughly from other Obscurists who should have been watching them both. Morgan was clever and resourceful; she’d concealed her abilities as an Obscurist for most of her life without being detected. Still . . . he knew it was a risk every time she sent him a message, and yet he still craved any contact from her like a drug. One day, she’d let something slip, some sign she was letting go of her anger and bitterness.
One day in the distant future, she might even forgive him.
He returned his Codex to the case on his belt and saw Glain looking at him from across the way. She might have suspected Morgan was still in contact with him, though he’d not been completely forthright about it. Glain knew too many of his secrets as it was.
Jess was just about to shut his eyes again when Santi strode into the room, swept all of them with a look, and pointed to Glain, then to Jess. “You two,” he said. “With me.”
He executed a crisp turn and left, leaving Jess and Glain to scramble up and after with as much decorum as their battle-sore bodies could manage, while the rest of their squad stared holes in their backs. Santi didn’t pause as the door shut behind them. He continued a quick march down the long, plain corridor, then up a flight of stairs decorated with Anubis statues in alcoves, and to an office door with an armed guard beside it. Santi accepted the soldier’s salute with one of his own.
“Dismissed,” he told the guard, and watched the man leave. Then he opened the door and led the way inside.
Christopher Wolfe sat on one side of a large solid table. He was shackled at the wrists.
“Sit down,” Santi said to Glain and Jess as he shut the door, and gestured to a wooden bench at the side of the room. He was still wearing that cool military expression, and it gave Jess a creeping sense of unease. Wolfe in chains, Santi acting utterly unlike himself . . . And the four of them in a locked room.
Glain slowly eased herself down on the bench and glared at Jess until he sat next to her. Santi dragged a wooden chair, a noisy slide over the stone floor, and thumped it in place across from Wolfe at the table.
Wolfe finally looked up. He seemed drawn and exhausted and—so wrong to Jess—vulnerable. He lifted his bound wrists silently, and, when Santi shook his head, dropped them back with a heavy clank of metal to the table.
Though he’d brought the chair over, Santi didn’t sit. “You’re still under arrest, Scholar Wolfe,” he said in a quiet, calm voice that raised the hackles on the back of Jess’s neck. “You’re going to stay that way. You know why.”
“Nic—”
“No.” Santi cut Wolfe off clean. “I don’t want to hear it. Don’t you understand the consequences? One of my recruits is dead. Another may never regain the use of her arm. That’s
you
. That was
your
choice to put yourself at risk when you damn well knew better, and I told you to stay away!” There was a flare of emotion at the end of that small speech, and Santi paused, as if he hadn’t meant to let it out. When he started again, his voice was once again pressed flat. “Tell me why I should ever let you roam around unmonitored again.”
Wolfe hadn’t looked away from Santi’s face the entire time. Hadn’t blinked. Hadn’t displayed the slightest flicker of guilt or anger. There was a strange light in his eyes that Jess couldn’t reckon. “Because hiding me away isn’t
working.
”
“It’s keeping you alive. That’s what I care about.”
“Then you care too much,” Wolfe said. There was a tremor in his voice now, and in his hands, too. Something broken behind his stare. “You’ve
locked me up.
I don’t take well to that. As you know.”
Santi sat down slowly, as if he didn’t even realize he was ceding ground. “It was necessary. You haven’t been yourself.”
“You tried to get a message to me,” Wolfe said, looking past