Chapter 36 In the Hole

Back at the bunks, Sage checked on Paisley first—still sleeping—then she went to Mina and sat down next to her.

“She’s in the building,” Sage whispered, and that was all she had time to say before Nana White arrived.

Nana White was wearing a dark-green wool suit with matching hat and black shoes.

Her fox stole that she called a cask hung around her shoulders, complete with face and little ears.

On her arm was a fox-fur purse with multiple pelts glued to a utilitarian bag.

She wore three flashy wedding rings on her left ring finger, and another three on her right.

Sage shuddered involuntarily. Nana White was crazy as hell.

“You girl,” Nana White barked at Sage. “Come with me.”

Sage threw Mina a look and Mina nodded, motioning that she would stay with Paisley. Sage followed Nana White outside into the cool, early-morning darkness. At the bottom of the steps were several golf carts. Nana White stopped near the first one and turned around to face Sage.

“I need your help little missy,” she said, her voice pitched low. “A Van Crimson has escaped Khain. He's on the grounds, trying to hide. He can't stay, and I need you to find him.”

“You can’t find him?” Sage said.

Nana White stared her down for a full minute, as if deciding what to say.

“Reynard’s gone dim,” she finally stated matter-of-factly. “And he’s not responding to me.”

Sage gasped and put a hand to her mouth. Reynard! Reynard Van Crimson was one of her best friends. He’d been her first kiss, her first innocent boyfriend back in middle school. She loved him like one of her very own family.

“Was he…?” Sage couldn’t bring herself to say it.

“Yes, he was marked. If you get him to show himself, I’ll take his mark and send him to his elder.”

Sage’s knees went weak and she felt queasy. Reynard was marked. His life was ruined. His life was over.

“You can—you can take his mark?” she asked weakly, her mind reeling.

“I can,” Nana White said, irritation growing in her voice.

“What if Khain finds him again? Can’t he stay here?”

“No. He interferes with the recherche. If it fails, we’re all in danger and I won’t risk it. Every minute he stays makes it more dangerous for us.” She poked a finger at the building they’d come from. “More dangerous for them.”

Sage didn’t know what a recherche was, but she bet it had something to do with the globe-looking thing on the table.

“Okay,” Sage said. “What do you want me to do?”

Nana White motioned to the golf cart. “We’re going in the hole.”

***

Sage drove Nana White across the grounds in the golf cart.

She kept to the main roads, not wanting to disturb the guests.

When the road ended, they drove around the barricade onto a trail.

When the trail ended at a seemingly impenetrable deadfall, Sage got out and pressed a button concealed in the knot of a fake tree, and the entire deadfall lifted silently out of the way.

Sage drove through quickly, then the deadfall lowered again.

It was still dark outside, still pre-dawn, and Sage shivered. She followed the dim path lights on the ground to the vehicle elevator. The door was open and Sage drove in. They sat silently while the elevator took them down into the sinkhole.

Once down, a large door on the other side of the vehicle elevator opened.

They were inside another cave. Sage drove out of the elevator, through a narrow corridor just big enough for the golf cart, lost in her own thoughts.

She didn’t go into the hole often, and it was always an eerie experience for her.

The sinkhole was old enough that a true Illinois forest grew tall and thick inside of it, with animal trails everywhere.

There were a few vehicle trails down here, but they didn’t go far.

Starlight was hard to see because of the canopy of trees overhead.

The cart had headlights, but they weren’t strong. The darkness and the feeling of the trees looming overhead added to Sage’s jitters.

Ahead, she saw a light. She slowed down, creeping along.

The light was Number Six, waving them on.

He was an older guy, but thick and tough-looking.

To Sage, he looked like he was in his 70s, with a silver brush cut, leathery olive-toned skin, no facial hair, and sharp, cruel features.

He had the silhouettes of a mouse and a mink tattooed behind his left ear.

He wore green coveralls with WHITE over the left pocket and SIX over the right pocket.

He pointed his flashlight at a grove of bushes, waving them toward it.

In his other hand, he held a large strange-looking gun, pointing toward the ground.

Sage pulled up close and turned off the engine of the golf cart. She got out slowly, her body on high alert. The sinkhole held a conglomerate of strong animal scents that Sage didn’t want to think about. She couldn’t scent her friend at all.

“Reynard,” she called out.

Nothing answered her. Even the small animals of the forest and the bugs were silent.

“Reynard,” she called again. “It’s me, Sage. Are you here?”

A stirring in the underbrush caught Sage’s attention and she held still, breathing shallowly, trying to hear and see everything all at once. She thought she heard something like a sighing, then a wind passed her face. She stood strong and as tall as she could.

“Reynard, please,” she said softly.

Sage felt a hand on her arm, then Reynard seemed to suddenly appear next to her, and then he was hugging her and clutching at her and wrapping himself around her. Sage set her feet and held him up as best she could.

“Sage,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “He got me. He marked me.”

He was dirty and looked wasted and exhausted. His clothing was dark and stained and smelled like blood. He yanked at his shirt, pulling it out, flopping back a little so Sage could see the red, raw, weeping, split-open flesh.

“Marked,” he said again, his voice breaking.

Sage choked and clutched him back. “Your renqua?” she said, not wanting to know, but needing to know. Reynard’s flag renqua had always been his pride and the pride of his entire family. It was strong, not faint or nonexistent, and he showed it often.

“Gone,” he said, his voice rough and hurting. “He scraped it off.”

Reynard yanked at his shirt and turned and bent so that Sage could see the back of his left shoulder.

There, where his bold, proud flag had been, was now only a meaty mess, an unnatural scab starting to form.

Sage cried. She couldn’t help it. His renqua!

It was just gone. How dare Khain? How dare he?

! She would kill him if she could. She would sneak up on him and separate his stinking head from his neck before he could take his next nasty breath. She would rip his—

Nana White stepped out of the golf cart and spoke, her voice commanding.

“Reynard Van Crimson. Come to me of your own accord.”

The frantic energy seemed to leak out of Reynard. He dropped his arms to his sides and turned his head to Nana White, then he walked that way, dragging his feet slightly. Sage watched him, her hands clasped together in front of her, her heart in her throat.

“Khain is planning another poisoning,” Reynard said dully. “Today. Dred needs to know.”

“And so he shall,” Nana White said.

Reynard reached Nana White and stopped. The woman crooked her finger at him, indicating he should bend down to her level. He bent.

SMACK.

Nana White smacked him in the center of his forehead with the flat of her palm, making Sage jump.

Reynard dropped to the ground like a ragdoll, face up, unconscious.

Quick as a cat, Nana White bent over him.

Light and a searing sound split the night like a visual scream, and then all was quiet and dark.

Sage covered her mouth with her hands, sick to her stomach. She shuffled toward them, tears spilling from her eyes, unspent rage circling around her skull.

Reynard’s shirt was now split down the middle.

The mark stood out starkly on his chest—three claw marks from shoulder to hip, three deeply furrowed streaks in flesh that made Sage’s heart hurt and her blood boil hotter.

If only she could kill the monster. If only she could tear him from existence and stop this pointless, devastating bullshit.

White touched the mark lightly, then looked at Sage, speaking uncharacteristically softly. “Number Six will bring me back. You take the cart and go. You don’t want to see this.”

Sage nodded and backed up, her hands still covering her mouth.

Please Rhen, she silently prayed. Let him be all right. She burst the prayer out of her, sending it in all directions, beseechingly, with every ounce of energy she had.

The back of her leg hit the golf cart and she almost fell.

She righted herself, got in, sobbing, hating it, hating all of it, rage and sorrow making her mind stutter and her heart twist. Not in her right mind, not knowing how she was managing it, she drove.

She sped back the way they had come and made it to the elevator.

The door shut and Sage sat in unnatural silence, crying softly to herself, allowing herself this short time to grieve.

The elevator dinged open. Sage cut off the hurt inside her off with practiced viciousness and drove out, pulling herself together little by little. She didn’t want anyone to see what had happened in the expression on her face.

She had to right herself completely before she made it back to her family.

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