[11] Childhood in Stretto [https://sixchanceshome.files.wordpress.com/2023/02/5-1.png?w=300]
Re-cap: Cadence Morello has faced her own self-deception and self-illusion. She has learnt that Donato of the Romano Family was the one behind Francisâs stabbing and that the man is working together with Enzo of the Campanas. But the city has been moving quickly without her notice. Thetaârather her childhood friend Francisâhas decided that it is time for ELPIS to make their move, and the Twin Cities begins to fragment under ELPISâs terror and âhope.â Now, Cadence and the other five must come together and decide to⦠[https://sixchanceshome.files.wordpress.com/2023/02/49.png?w=1024]
TWIN CITIES, GEMINI
Cadence opened her eyes.
She was flat on her back with the dampness of the pavement beneath her soaked into her suit jacket and pants. Pain throbbed up and down her limbsâunpleasant when paired with the taste of iron in her mouth.
She blinked and squinted.
It was pitch black. She couldnât even tell if she was looking at the sky or the ground. If it was the sky, she figured sheâd at least be able to see the city lights reflected back by the smog clouds, but there was nothing.
Was she dreaming? No. Itâd be a terrible dream if she felt this awful. Was she dead then?
And then she heard the screams, the pit-pat-pit-pat of gunfire that reminded her more of Wernerâs side of things than her own, and the blaring of sirens.
Maybe she was in hell.
âWhat in saintâs nameâ¦â
You lost consciousness.
Jerichoâs face eclipsed her just as a sudden burst of burning white light became reflected on the smog clouds above her.
âYep. Seems so. From pain instead of drinkinâ this time, though. Great.â
The white light faded from the sky, leaving her in complete darkness again.
âDetective⦠what the hell is goinâ on here?â
ELPIS made their move. They cut the insulation lines connecting the generator conductors around the city to the vitae reservoirsâ generator conductors around three hours ago. ELPIS members are on the street. Targeting civilians and searching for members of the Romanos and the Campanas. Bendetto has gone missing.
What�
Iâve been put on a task force set to hunt the ELPIS leaders who are confirmed to now be present in the city. Theta, Omicron, Iota. A pause. Then Jericho added as if an afterthoughtâI alsoâ¦
The memories of Omegaâs execution in the damp, dark warehouse flooded Cadenceâs mind. The anger, the hatred, the righteousness, the minute satisfaction. And the emptiness afterwards.
Cadenceâs heart thundered in her chest.
We have not located Theta yet. Another pause. I have not informed Leona of the connection between Theta and Francis either.
Relief.
Thanks, detective. Butâ¦
âI⦠I donât get it.â Cadence pulled herself up to a sit and groaned. âWhy are they actinâ now? Thought they were aiminâ ta lie low till they found that mystical third vitae reservoir. Use the Families against each other.â
Yes, Leona believes ELPIS has uncovered the location of the third reservoir, and they are now aiming to destroy the three central generator conductors hooked to them simultaneously. She has increased the number of agents guarding them, but given Thetaâs ability, it may not be sufficient. The city conductor engineers are attempting to restore power.
âLeona?â Cadence struggled to a stand and began to drag herself blindly forward, hoping she wasnât walking towards a dead-end. âYou tellinâ me that Leona knows that thereâs a third vitae reservoir in the Twin Cities? That there actually is one?â
Another memory flashed into Cadenceâs mindâthe limestone pillars at the front of the Leonian Monadic Temple in the Monadic District. Then the pews within, pointing towards the faceless statue at the back. Then the back room behind that statue, and then the trap door within the backroom that led to a descending staircase. Up from the depths of those stairs bled soft light and intense heat.
âBeneath the Monadic Templesâ¦? Seriously? Brainâs a little mush right now, so I canât even think of a good joke.â Cadence chortled and winced at the pain that followed. She pushed forward, drawing closer to a barely noticeable streak of light several meters ahead. âHow did Leââ
âThe first chairs of all the departments of Ophiuchus receive confidential reports from the different countries of Signum about newly formed vitae reservoirs bi-annually,â Leona had informed Jericho at the crowded roundtable meeting within the Abaccio. âOf course, the countries are free to do what they please with these reservoirs as long as they follow conductor regulation and donât start conflict over them. This particular reservoir formed one year following the end of the war and was delegated to be harvested in only times of emergency.â
âSo, the official papers say,â Cadence muttered.
Finally, she reached the streak of lightâthe end of the alleyway. She stopped at the threshold and peered out onto the street.
âWhat theâ¦â
The street itself was lit by a handful of trash fires spotted in front of tourist trap shops that had either boarded-up or broken windows. The walkways were scattered with shards of glass. Men in suits, women in dresses, men in rags, women in rags stampeded up and down those walkways, shrieking at the top of their lungs. A v-ehicle blitzed on and off-road, nearly taking out a v-lamp. Behind that disaster, another group was running down the sidewalk waving clubs and bats. Chasing after that group were three police officers waving batons.
As if thatâs gonna help.
Cadence took a step forward flabbergasted, only to be rammed and shoved sideways first by a woman in high heels and then again by a man with a bag full of Geminian cens slung over his shoulders.
âScrew the Romanos! Screw the Campanas!â the man whooped, fist-pumping the air and shoving aside an old woman who was coming up in the opposite direction. âThis city belongs to usââ
A white ray of vitae cut across the darkness and struck the man mid-sentence. He was thrown to the ground instantly, the coins in his bag spilling out onto the street.
Cadence ducked back into the alleyway just as a crowd of men and women darted in the direction of the fallen man. She peered around the corner and found them all scrambling on the ground and shoving the scattered cens into their pockets. Cadence scanned the road opposite where the vitae ray had emerged from, but it was empty save for two pacing girls. The two crossed the road and came to the aid of the old woman whoâd been pushed to the side by the man earlier. They helped the woman to her feet and escorted her across the street away from the scrambling crowd. They sat her down there in front of a coffee shop with boarded-up windows.
Cadence recognized one of the girls immediately. The butterfly-shaped birthmark was undeniable. Matilda.
Keeping low, Cadence forced herself forward again, crossed the road, and approached them with a wave. âHey, Tilda, ainât you a good samaritan?â
Matilda jumped and turned on her heels. âCadeâoh, saints.â Matildaâs relief folded into horror. âW-What happened to youâ¦?â
âLong story. Been out a bit.â Cadence thumbed a man throwing a trash can into the window of a bookshop two blocks down. âYou been in contact with any of the Romano capos in the past few hours? Canât imagine theyâd let this go down even if Bendettoâs been spirited away like everyoneâs been sayinâ.â
âBendetto.â Matilda swallowed, shook her head. âYouâCadence, itâs completely nuts. Thereâs⦠ELPIS membersâre running around saying that theyâre cleansing the city of all the Families. A-And people have been saying that a couple of Romano executives were rigged with conducting grenades and sent off to Romano fronts. A-All the smaller gangs in the city are taking advantage of everything.â She frowned. âI⦠havenât reached out to Cavallo⦠The Campanas, the RomanosâI-I donât know, Cadence. But ELPIS really is here. I-I saw them. I saw the Ophiuchians too. I sawâ¦â
Cadence placed a hand on her shoulder. âWhat did ya see, Matilda?â
âYou⦠You wouldnât believe me. What I sawâ¦â
âTry me,â Cadence said before she cracked a grin with effort. âI mean, Iâm an illusionist.â
Matilda took a deep breath and informed Cadence of her experience in the casino right before ELPIS unleashed their brand of justice on the city, about her experience with ThetaâFrancisâat the highest floor of the building, about how Bendetto had been tied and gagged and captured.
âHe let me go afterwards. Told me to get out of the cityâ¦â Matilda finished.
âAnd why didnât ya?â
Matilda frowned. âWhere do I even go if I leave?â She nodded to the girl behind her. âSome of the people in my group canât afford to leave either. They have family here, and theyâre my family.â She grimaced. âThat definitely wasnât Mr. Francis. He was looking at me like I was the saddest thing in the world. I hated it. Like, this city might be awful, but itâs good too. People like him scare me⦠Saying that he needs to destroy it to fix it. Why not just fix it?â
Cadence studied Matilda for a moment and felt an odd swell of pride in her chest. âThatâs my girl, Tilda.â She nodded at the old woman. âAnd the super-heroism?
Matilda shrugged. âIf this all blows over, then I have a bunch of people who owe me. Simple as that.â
Cadence ruffled the girlâs hair. âWell, donât overdo yourself, girlie.â She pulled away and turned on her heels. âAnd stay safe, will ya?â
âWait, where are you going?â
Cadence waved. âFor a drink.â
* * *
Cadence wove through the city streets that she knew like the back of her hand. She dodged a couple of delinquents swinging around metal pipes, misdirected a robber away from a group of cowering children hiding in an abandoned v-ehicle, and eventually found herself in front of the Sognare. A sign was posted at the front: CLOSED until further notice.
She peered inside through the window. Empty. She tried the door. Unlocked.
Cadence slipped inside and collapsed on the bar table. The bartenderâas expectedâwas nowhere to be seen, so Cadence rounded the counter, poured herself a spritz, and downed it in two gulps. She slapped the glass down and slid to the ground against the wine cases at the back.
âGuysâ¦â Cadence tried. She lowered her head and tried again, this time with feeling as she reached outwardsââGuys! Please!â
Slowly, gradually, the other five filtered into her view. Maria sitting up on the bar counter, Olive and Atienna leaning against it, Jericho and Werner standing to the side. Lavi didnât seem to be around, but Cadence figured that was a good thing.
All of their intense feelings that she had felt wavering beneath the surface came at her like a tsunami upon synchronization. It took her a moment to separate her own anxiety from theirs. When she did, she found them all looking at her with varying expressionsâbut they all shared a similar emotion. Concern.
Cadence buried her head in her hands as that warmth bled into her.
Damn.
Atienna moved forward and knelt down beside her, placing a hand on her cheek at the exact spot where sheâd slapped her.
âIâm fine, Iâm fine,â Cadence said, lifting her head and cracking a grin. âNow that youâre here, doll.â
The attention then turned to Werner. There was still a void of darkness stretching behind him, and there was a somewhat distant look in his eyes.
âIâm fine as well,â Werner stated. âThat isnât whatâs pertinent at the moment.â
âRight.â Cadence spread her arms wide. âWell, weâve got a saint candidate peacekeeper whoâs workinâ with ELPIS, obviously. Weâve got a colonel True Conductor whoâs workinâ with ELPIS and whoâs connected to a murderous Aquarian advisor. Weâve got a buncha kids stuck in a hellish slavery bit. And weâve got ELPIS mowinâ through the city like maniacs.â
Maria pressed her hands together. âIt is rather exciting, yes? So many things happening at once!â She peered into Oliveâs face and beamed. âAnd let us not forget that amazing conductor trick you did!â She looked around the bar at them. âI donât really understand it, but if this is a True Conductor thing, does that mean I can do it too?â She leaped off the counter and slipped in between Werner and Jericho, beaming. âBoth of your conductings are very cool! I would like to tryââ
âThat development is rather interesting, Maria,â Atienna interjected with a gentle smile, âbut we should try focusing on the immediate issues, donât you think?â
If you spot this story on Amazon, know that it has been stolen. Report the violation.
âRight. And thereâs only one way weâre gettinâ out of this damn mess,â Cadence said, struggling back up to a stand. âAnd thatâs by workinâ together. We need ta be honest with each other.â
There was silence.
Olive arched an eyebrow at her.
âI know, I know. Iâm the last person in the position ta be sayinâ that. Iâve been sayinâ Iâm sorry, but itâs not enough.â Cadence grimaced. âBut, weâre all beinâ dishonest here. With ourselves and each other. Iâm not trynna make excuses for myself. We gottaâme includedâstop lookinâ at this whole True Conductor thing like itâs just a situation thatâll go away.â She took in a deep breath. âIt ainât. Our lives are literally on the same chord. One note off, and itâll be a disaster.â She held her hands out. âIâm not sayinâ we should be all holdinâ-hands-like, frolickinâ in the fields or anything. I ainât that optimistic. But we should be on the same page, feelins out. Weâre livinâ together literally; andâlike it or notâweâre probably gonna end up dyinâ together; and weâre gonna end up carinâ for each other if we donât already do. Itâs hard not ta. The more we try ta deny, the more weâll butt heads.â She tapped her temple. âIt might be a lie. Who knows? I mean, appearancesâfeelings, evenâare deceiving. But sometimes a lie can eventually work its way into becoming a truth. And itâs just asâif not even moreâvalid.â
There was a beat of silence as Cadence took a minute to catch her breath. The silence continued afterwards. If she were Olive, she figured sheâd be embarrassed.
âAw, come on, guys.â Cadence chuckled, wincing at the stomach pain that followed. âI know Iâm ramblinâ here, but Iâm pourinâ my heart out ta ya. Please donât leave me hanginââ
âHonestly, that reminded me of one of those drama plays my aunt and uncle used to force me to watch,â Olive interjected. âAnd Iâm pretty sure you contradicted yourself twice there, butâ¦â Olive met her eyes and nodded. I understand.
Jericho gave a silent thumbs-up. Maria offered her a small, but cheery clap with a beaming smile, while the corner of Atiennaâs eyes crinkled. Werner remained impassive.
As expected.
âHonestly, right now,â Cadence drew, âall I wanna do is ta get myself, the Foxmans, Fortuna, and Nico the hell outta this city; or at least get whatever the hell this is fixed.â
Despite everything, Alma flashed into Cadenceâs mind. She grimaced and shook her head.
âAll of those guys were like family ta me before all this True Conductor stuff went down. Iâm still pretty selfish so I canât think beyond what I want and whatâs important ta me. Not the Families or even ELPIS,â Cadence admitted, gesturing to herself. As soon as those words left her mouth, she felt a weight lift off her chest. She then nodded at each of them. âWerner wants ta bring down Oberst Douchebag for Capricorn. Atienna wants ta keep that crazy secretary chained down and stop her from muckinâ things up with the diplomacy thing. Maria wants ta save the children the Campanaâs are sellinâ âcause she feels like itââ
âAy, you know me so well.â Maria hummed.
ââand Jericho wants ta save Alice and wipe all trace of ELPIS outta the city. Olive wants ta complete the State Conducting Examââ
Olive uncrossed his arms. âIââ
ââand he wants us ta all make it outta this stitch alive, and save Lavi along the way, and also for all of us ta get what we want. Pretty greedy if ya ask me,â Cadence finished. âAnyway, Iâm not satisfied with just a win on my end. I want there ta be a win on your guyâs sides too. Honest. Thereâs gotta be a way for all of us ta hit these marks. I mean, Iâm not the sharpest tool in the shed, but all of ya are pretty brilliant.â She paused. âAny ideas?â
There was a stretch of silence; and in that silence, there was rumination. Ideas zipped from one end of Cadenceâs mind to the other, and she could barely catch hold of them before they were discarded in favor of a different idea. The others were shuffling through their thoughts faster than a shady dealer shuffled a deck of bad cards.
And then, it clicked. For all of them. It wasnât that one person had come up with a completely brilliant idea; rather, it was more like they all came up with a part of an idea that somehow all came together to form a singular, coherent concept.
It was an odd feelingâthe way it all coalesced together in Cadenceâs mind. She figuredâas she felt Werner smooth out that ideaâs rough edges within his own mindâthat this was what synchronization was about.
âYes, that could work,â Werner finally said, a thoughtful hand over his mouth, âbut itâs based on relying on many assumptions. Our timing also would have to be exact.â
âItâs a gamble,â Cadence agreed. âBut Iâm feelinâ a bit lucky this week.â
âThereâs no such thing as luck, Cadence,â Werner corrected. âBut given our few viable options, that is the route that seems the least⦠problematic.â
âGreat,â Cadence popped, leaning back against the wine cabinet as she took in a deep breath. âHopefully, the cardsâll fall in our favorâ¦.â She paused, unlatching herself and approaching Jericho hesitantly. She looked him up and down and then swallowed. âLook, detective, I know how you feel about ELPIS. I understand. But pleaseâ¦â Her voice cracked despite her efforts. âHeâs still Francis.â She placed a hand on the peacekeeperâs arm. âHeâs still Francis. His vitae wasnât âreturning to the cycleâ or whatever that means when they used the resistor on him, so itâs still him. I know Iâm beinâ so selfish right now, but please just wait until⦠I honestly donât know⦠but please, Jericho.â She tightened her grip. âWe can figure something out. Just wait. For just a little bit.â
Cadence knew the peacekeeper could feel how much Francis meant to her. The childhood memories of them wandering the late-night streets in search of tourists to pickpocket in their younger years was just as much burned into his mind as it was hers. The thing was that she didnât know if that was enoughâ
âOkay. I will,â Jericho agreed after a beat. âFor you. Because he is still Francis.â Then something in his eyes sharpened. âAnd I would like to speak with Theta.â
âGot it.â
Cadence turned to Werner then who was standing right beside Jericho. She met the manâs gaze, curled her hand into a fist, and lightly tapped it against his chest.
âI will make this right, Werner. I promise.â
* * *
On the day of the planâs execution, Cadence got a tip-off from Matilda on where Theta was. The girl informed Cadence that one of her workersâone of her friendsâhad told her that Theta had been inviting a cluster of children every so often to join him at a particular location within the city. The location itself was completely out of the woods, in Cadenceâs opinion, and she wondered if heâd truly be there. But it was her only lead.
And so, Cadence slid on the proto-conductor rings sheâd stolen from Russo, transmuted the guise of Matilda over herself, and took to the streets. The police had ordered a citywide curfew a day or two ago, but as usual, no one heeded it. The darkened walkways were crowded with ambling gangs of thieves, delinquents, and hustlers, all sneering and jeering as they stalked their newly minted territory.
Cadence ducked past them, swept through cement walkways that bled into cobblestone streets, strolled through one of the cityâs few metropolitan parks, and made her way over to the one place in the city she had never stepped foot in. The Twin Cities Library.
It was a large building that resembled more of a Monadic temple than anything else. Guarded by two large stone pillars that held up a triangular roof, the library loomed over the empty cobblestone walkways and stretched shadows all across the street. A white limestone staircase unfurled up to the entrance of the building, where a pair of twin statues of cupids stood erect.
As expected, the streets around the establishment were empty. No one in the city wanted to steal books, it seemed. Cadence could feel Atiennaâs relief at this.
Sucking in a breath, Cadence crept her way up the stairs and slipped inside. The smell of old, musty books greeted her immediately. The interior was dark, and she could barely make out the outlines of the towering bookcases lining the walls. A small sliver of light bled out from the back of the library. After making her way around the bookcases and towards the light, she found a wooden door that was slightly ajar.
Steeling herself, she slipped inside.
The room within was small. A large, oak desk sitting front and center was cluttered with stacks of books and littered with wax candles. Gathered around the wealth of knowledge and light sat Theta and a group of children and adolescents. With everything going on in the city, the groupâs serenity seemed out of placeâillusory.
Some of the children gathered recognized Cadence at her entranceârather, they recognized her guise of Matildaâand leaped to their feet, beaming.
âYou came!â they exclaimed. Their expressions fell, however, when they registered her carefully practiced expression of panicked fear.
âT-Thetaâ¦â Cadence stammered, stumbling forward. When Theta looked up at her in mild surprise, she took a step backwards. âI-I know you told me to leave, but I⦠I couldnât. Some of the others wouldnât. Andâ¦â She forced tears to spill from her eyes. âA bunch of men⦠the gangs⦠t-they⦠they attacked us⦠They took Marzia and the others. I-I donât know who to go to⦠Thereâs no one. I⦠I-Iâ¦â
Theta shut the book in his hands with a snap, rose from his seat, and paced over to her. The children parted as he did so, all wearing varying expressions of guilt and worry. When Theta reached Cadenceâs side, he wiped the false tears from her eyes with his thumb.
âUse my proto-conductor as Iâve shown you,â Theta addressed the children behind him. âAnd leave this city.â He knelt down and met Cadenceâs eyes. âTell me where, Matilda.â
Cadence swallowed. âW-Warehouse 13. Theââ
ââone near the docks running along the center of the city,â Theta finished. âDo they have conductors?â
Cadence nodded.
âI see.â The light in Thetaâs eyes changed. âThereâs no reason to be afraid. Iâll help you.â
The one good thing about Francis being Theta was that Theta was a bit gullible, Cadence thought. She didnât quite know how old âThetaâ was, but she figured seniority could make people just as naïve as youth did in certain situations.
Theta extended his bare hand, and Cadence accepted it hesitantly. The man then pressed his gloved hand against the carpet beneath them, which Cadence now noticed was stained black. The stain glowed at his contact, and they began to sink down into the blindingly bright portal.
Cadence winced at the light and shut her eyes. When she opened them a second later, she found herself standing in a cool, dark, familiar warehouse.
Empty metal trash bins were rusted into the ground, and piles of metal pipes cluttered the dirt floor. A hull of a ship rested at the center of the warehouse, looking the same as it did when Cadence had come into this place several months prior.
Theta scanned the darkness from beside her. âWhere are they?â He looked down at her, expression impassive. âMatilda, tell meââ Thetaâs eyes widened, and something flickered in his eyes. âAre you⦠Cadence?â
Cadenceâs heart skipped a beat.
How had he known her name? Sheâd never encountered Theta as herself before, so that could only mean⦠Francis and Theta were starting to bleed into each other.
Noâ¦
âT-The swindler? She wasnât the one who took them.â Cadence feigned confusion. She shook her head and scanned the dark. âThey were just here. I swear. The gang mustâveââ
âEnough.â
Cadence tensed and turned to meet Thetaâs eyes.
âYou deceived me.â The manâs eyes narrowed, and he lifted his gloved hand. âYouââ
Now!
Before Theta could finish his sentence, Jericho leaped down from his perch on the steel beam above their heads. The peacekeeper tackled Theta to the ground, pinning the manâs hands behind his back before slapping on a pair of suppression cuffs over his wrists. Theta went slack immediately, allowing Jericho to pry his conductor glove off of him. Jericho remained planted there unmovingly as he stared holes down into the man.
Jericho.
Jericho glanced at Cadence and removed himself from the manâs back. Snapping her fingers to dispel Matildaâs appearance, Cadence moved forward, stopped only momentarily by a hand around the arm. Jericho again. Cadence patted his hand; and he released her, allowing her to sink to the floor and crawl over to the unconscious man.
Come on, Cadence urged as she studied his face. Please let the kidâs idea work.
The manâs eyes fluttered open as soon as the thought left her, and a quiet groan escaped from his lips as he blinked blearily around. When he locked onto Cadenceâs face, he stared. âCadenceâ¦? What happened to your face?â
Cadence scrambled forward. âQuick. Tell me something only Francis would know.â
A perplexed expression flashed across the manâs face. âWhen I was fourteen years old, I snuck out with a girl one night to go to some party. You agreed to be me for the night so Allen wouldnât find out. You still use that as blackmail to this day.â
Cadence brightened immediately, but then frowned. âTheta might know that too with the way this whole thing works. Thereâs gotta be somethinâ else.â
âHow about we play a round of cards,â the man suggested. âIf you win, then Iâm Theta. If I win, Iâm Francis and you can be Theta.â
âOkay, Francis, no need ta push it.â Letting out a sigh of unmeasurable relief, Cadence helped him up to a sitting position. âTake it easy.â
âWhatâs going on? Where are we?â Francis asked, scanning the warehouse. âIs this Warehouse 13?â He tried the cuffs behind him, eyes darkening. âWhat is this?â
âYou are under the jurisdiction of Ophiuchus,â Jericho stated from behind Cadence. âWe have placed suppression cuffs on you in an attempt to suppress Thetaâs vitae in hopes of also suppressing his memory and influence. We have succeeded.â
âThe suitcase peacekeeperâ¦â Francis studied Jericho before his eyes widened. âYouâre the Ophiuchian who came down here to investigate that other peacekeeperâs disappearance a couple months ago.â
Jericho stared down at Francis. Cadence could see in the peacekeeperâs mindâs eye that he was staring down into the past. Affection and hatred twisted together as one. It made Cadenceâs stomach do flip-flops.
âYes, that was me,â Jericho finally said.
Francis continued to study Jericho before he suddenly startled and whipped to Cadence. âAllen, Carl, and Fortunaââ
âSlow down, Francis,â Cadence said, squeezing his shoulder. âThe city is lookinâ like a bad bar fight right now âcause ELPISâs decided ta make their entry into the spotlight.â
Francis paled. âDid Iâ¦â He shook his head, eyes sharpening. âThe Ophiuchiansââ
âArenât really involved in this whole thing we got goinâ on right now.â Cadence thumbed Jericho. âHeâs a bit of a black sheep with âem and heâs pullinâ one out for me, but heâs the best in my book. A friend of his thatâs helpinâ us is cominâ along in a bit too.â
Francis seemed to digest this information slowly. âSo, whatâs the plan here then?â
âA couple of the execs from both sides are cominâ down here in a couple,â Cadence explained. âFrom the Romanos and the Campanas.â
Francis blanched. âHow in the world did you manage that?â
Cadence rubbed the back of her neck. âI⦠kinda had ta tell them that I got the one behind orchestratinâ this entire thing on a leash.â
âSo, theyâre coming here for me,â Francis surmised.
He didnât look happy.
âLook. Theyâre our best bet at gettinâ control of the city, and they all need ta get on the same page,â Cadence explained. âThe police ainât in any state to get the reins in, and Ophiuchus is focused on the reservoirs. Plus, we can explain the situation with you too. And Enzo and Donatoââ
âEnzo and Donato?â
âYeah, Iâll explain that bit later.â Cadence waved her hand. âBut⦠I can call the executives off if yaâd like.â She scratched her head and sighed. âThough⦠I kinda pushed them ta do me an additional favor, so if I back out now, Iâll be in the ruts.â
âAn additional favor?â
âYeah, long story short, I asked âem both ta destroy any evidence that theyâd been dealinâ with the Capricornian Army.â She poked him in the chest. âMind if I ask ya ta do the same in exchange for me gettinâ your head half on?â
âWait. Are the Capricornians pulling out of the deal?â Francis frowned. âI would have to consult Allen and Carl about that first. We keep records for a reason, Cadence.â He arched a brow. âAnd why are you pushing for this? Did they pay you?â
Cadence flashed a grin, placing a finger to her lips. âA secret.â
Francis shook his head, amused. âWell, it wouldnât be very business savvy of me to just go and accept those terms, would it?â The very faint smile he had on fell. âJokes aside, whatâs going on with my brothers?â
âThat part of the plan is in action as we speak. Donât ya worry about it,â Cadence elaborated before she chortled. âBy the way, howâs it feel to be a damsel in distress?â
Instead of receiving the slightly annoyed chuckle from him sheâd expected, Francis suddenly slumped forward.
Cadence caught him. âH-Hey, talk ta me. Whatâs goinâ on?â
âSorry. Iâm just⦠really⦠tiredâ¦.â Francis shook his head, his eyelids drooping slightly.
Cadence reached over and lightly slapped him on the cheek. âCome on, Francis, stay with me.â
Francis blinked and shook his head again.
âSay⦠Cadenceâ¦â he murmured. âWho do you think has the moral high ground here?â
Cadenceâs heart skipped a beat, and she grabbed Francis by the shoulder. âFrancis.â She squeezed. âLook at me. Weâre not the ones throwinâ this city into the shit.â
She was about to mention that they werenât the ones who were taking advantage of children either, but then she remembered Matilda and then the Diverger children. Damn. What they had been doing was wrong. No two cents about it. But stillâ
Cadence continued, âWe ainât the ones runninâ around actinâ as judge, jury, and executioner. And we ainât destroyinâ lives on an international scale.â
âArenât we?â Francis stared into her, and Cadence couldnât help but stare back at the snake tattoo on his face. âI mean all of the conductors that weâve been shipping out, that the Romanos have been selling⦠weâve been indirectly taking lives since we were teenagers⦠Those people may have been using the conductors weâve been selling to protect their countries and families, but whatâs our reason?â
âReasonâ¦â Jericho repeated.
What was this�
Cadence reached out with both of her hands and grabbed a hold of Francisâs face. He stared back at her with raised brows. Cadence figured he was wondering if she was who was losing their mind. She figured she was.
âFrancis, look. Iâm not even sure if thereâs even a âlesser of two evilsâ thing here. Iâm pretty shit, youâre pretty shit, theyâre pretty shit,â Cadence said. âBut unlike themâdespite all their talk about responsibility, yada, yadaâwe can change. Them? As soon as they kick the bucket and return ta their resistor, theyâre back ta square one. They can look through all the records and bookshelves they keep all they want, but they ainât actually learninâ anythinâ from it. They canât take responsibilityâdonât care taâ âcause they canât even feel the guilt or consequences of what they do. âCause they donât even remember it.â A heat twisted in her chest. âAll they do is spew some sorta rhetoric that the world is in the dirts now and spread the false hope that everything is gonna be peachy after they do their âworkâ.â
Francis arched a brow at her.
âSorry. Got kinda heated there, but I really mean that first bit.â Cadence released him from her hold. âBut, itâll be okay. Youâll be okay, Francis. Weâll fix this and get everything back ta the way it was. I promise.â
Francis studied her before he lowered his head and chuckled. Musically. A wonderful sound. âAlright, Cadence. Iâll let you swindle me a little while longer.â