Free Read Novels Online Home

Butterfly in Amber (Spotless Book 4) by Camilla Monk (26)

TWENTY-FIVE

THE SEA MONSTER


I’m getting used to wearing whatever I can scrape together to cover my temptress body. Like those black mechanic pants I found in our cabin’s closet—I actually think they’re cool—and a green Springboks sweatshirt, courtesy of Dominik. The only other clean T-shirt in his bag read “It won’t suck itself” on the front; we both averted our eyes and tried to pretend I hadn’t noticed.

Isiporho lent March some clothes, since they’re about the same size, so he at least gets to look normal, in dark wool pants, a gray sweater, and a clean white shirt underneath. As soon as he’s put on the sweater, he sets to rolling the sleeves up with meticulous gestures. Two perfectly equal folds, measured using the cuff, and thoroughly flattened. Once he’s through, he inspects the result with a satisfied huff.

“Feeling better?” I ask.

He nods, but his eyebrows pinch in concern. “I know this isn’t ideal . . . I contacted Phyllis; she’ll have a suitcase ready for you in Istanbul.”

“So that’s where we’re going?”

“Yes—”

The cabin’s door slams open before March has the time to finish his answer. Yup, Dries somehow escaped Erwin’s claws, and it seems my biological father never learned to knock. He gauges me, regal in a navy striped three-piece suit that looks like it came straight from dry cleaning. He takes a sip from a fuming coffee mug in his hand. “Come, I’ll give you a tour.”

We follow him out, and upon discovering the rest of the ship, my confusion deepens. The ship is a plane after all. I gather the small bedroom March and I warmed ourselves in is located at the tail, and the long, cathedral-like cabin we just entered looks every bit like the inside of a military plane: no windows in sight, and rather than the smooth plastic covering the walls of commercial aircraft, it’s steel, levers, and buttons everywhere, completed by large nets meant to secure cargo. Two rows of seats face each other on the sides, all empty—save for two.

The usual carefree grin lights up Isiporho’s face when he sees us, and he rises from his seat. Dominik’s hand jerks in the semblance of a greeting, but he doesn’t look up from his laptop, his fingers rapping feverishly on the keyboard. I don’t think he’s that busy: more likely he doesn’t want to make eye contact with me after the T-shirt incident.

Isiporho looks up to the plane’s ceiling and gestures to the imposing structure with a swipe of his arm. “Not bad, huh?”

“It’s amazing,” I concede. “But . . . what is this thing?”

Dries’s chest swells with pride. “Let me show you.”

We follow him to the other end of the cabin, up narrow stairs, and to the cockpit door. On the other side, Jan and Andrea sit respectively in the pilot and copilot seats, cocooned in a jungle of wires, switches, buttons, and dials. It’s the stormy sea stretching as far as the eye can see that steals my breath though. I instinctively squeeze March’s hand, an astonished grin taking over my face. We’re not in the sky. We’re racing, gliding above the Black Sea at dizzying speed. Yet, inside the cockpit, there’s only this continuous hum, like we’re in a quiet bubble, sheltered from the tons of water we lift in our wake.

I know this. I can’t remember where I learned it, but the physics principle behind the magic is still here, engraved in my mind. Short wingspan combined with low-altitude flight, close to the ground: reduces drag, increases lift, allowing it to hover over any surface at incredible speed. “It’s a ground-effect craft!” I squeak.

“Meet the Caspian Sea Monster!” Dikkenek confirms with a cheerful bellow, echoed by Andrea’s excited bark.

Dries seems in an equally good mood. “It’s a Soviet ekranoplan prototype they built in the seventies, a Lun class. Those poor idiots dropped the program and let that beauty rot on dry land. I bought it from the Russians in the nineties, but Anies never really saw the point. We renovated it, but we didn’t do much with it either.”

“She’s been waiting for years in a hangar in Odessa, and all she wanted was to fly!” Dikkenek laughs.

Dries toasts him with his coffee mug. “Twenty to forty feet above the water.” He points to one of the innumerable dials on the dashboard. “Four hundred miles per hour under radar-detection level.” He shakes his head. “Anies never saw the point, but believe me, I do . . .”

At the evocation of Anies’s name, the past few hours rush back to me, and chills run down my spine. Stiles. He knew it was Dries as soon as he saw the ekranoplan, but I’m getting the feeling that there’s more to this. His southern drawl echoes in my head again. Don’t worry about Mr. November . . . His fairy godmother watches over him.

“What happened?” I ask Dries. “How did you escape Erwin? How did you know where to intercept us?”

He takes a long sip, his golden gaze darkening, almost amber in the dim cockpit light. “One thing at a time. Let’s sit down and have a little chat.”

•••

There’s some uncertainty regarding when exactly the cocoa powder that went in my mug was produced, but Dries said it’s fine, that these things never go bad and that Soviet-era cocoa was mostly beet sugar and color additives anyway. That’s precisely what I feared, but I’m starving, so I’m dipping my third Soldier Fuel peanut butter bar in the brownish water in my mug while March watches me with no small amount of concern over his coffee cup. Isiporho joined us, but he noted that the only thing he trusted in the ekranoplan’s galley was the tea—March hasn’t touched his coffee since.

After I’ve gulped down the last bite of my energy bar, I take a circular look at the three men gathered with me around a table in the aircraft’s briefing room. A continuous drizzle hits the windows, coming from the massive trail of surf we leave in our wake. I rest my elbows on the melamine and lace my fingers. “So, how did you find us?” I ask. “Was it because of Erwin’s men? They were following us before the Lions killed them.”

Dries chuckles. “At least they were useful once in their life.”

“But how did you escape?” I probe.

He waves his hand dismissively. “There was no need to escape . . . What did you think? That I couldn’t deal with that deplorable clown? He needs me. Right now I’m his only hope to ever crawl out from the archives.”

I frown. “The archives?”

March chimes in. “Well, much like the rest of us, Mr. Erwin has been going through a bit of a rough patch since the Poseidon incident.”

“They flushed that malodorous turd . . . Good riddance.” Dries snorts.

Okay, I’m increasingly lost . . . “They?”

“Mr. Erwin used to be the unofficial head of the Directorate of Foreign Operations,” March explains. “But with two rogue agents joining a criminal organization, six hundred victims in the plane bombing, and an entire vacation resort sunk in the Pacific . . . the agency decided it was time for new leadership.”

I nod. “So he got fired? Or is he in charge of the archives now? But he had all those soldiers with him . . .”

“To the best of my knowledge, he’s been offered a position within the declassified archives department, to oversee the sorting of all cafeteria-related complaints from 1947 to 1990,” March says.

I wince. “I . . . I don’t think that’s what he’s doing right now.”

“Neither do I. He may not have the ear of the new administration, but he siphoned considerable sums from his budget over the years, and he’s well connected. I’m assuming he’s using those resources to go after Anies.”

“On his own?”

Isiporho shrugs. “Possibly, but you never know with men like him . . .”

“No.” Dries considers his empty cup with a smirk. “He’s hunting alone, probably hiring ex–black ops. Steed and his team don’t trust the agency. They purged the old dogs and replaced them with a bunch of brain-addled brown-nosers. Good for our business. Bad for Erwin’s . . .”

I listen, trying to put the pieces of the puzzle together. “So you made a deal with him?” I ask Dries.

“Not quite, but he understands I’m after Anies too, and his best hope to take him down is to let me lure him out.”

“Unless it’s the other way other around,” Isiporho notes dryly.

I stiffen. “What do you mean?”

Dries fishes something from his inner pocket that he tosses onto the table. Casting a faint golden hue on the melamine is my pendant. Or rather two halves of it. The amber has been shattered, and with it, the frail wings of the butterfly. I touch it tentatively, both relieved and ashamed. It might have been Anies’s gift, but it was also a precious archeological piece, and now it’s been destroyed. “Did it break in the river? It was in my pocket . . . but it was intact when Stiles gave it back to me.”

March reaches to take my hand in his as Dries growls, “He’s playing with us. I should have dumped that little cunt in a meat grinder when I had the chance . . .”

Around me, I feel the walls tilt, and I’m getting seasick. I squeeze March’s fingers to anchor myself. “You broke it.” And I think I know why.

Isiporho shakes his head with a bitter smile. “We were so focused on that thing in your head and the plate in your wrist that we never thought to search for a bug anywhere else.”

March points to the golden metal loop and the larger piece of metal that used to secure the disc of amber. “It’s high-end technology, undetectable when it’s not actively transmitting. The signal itself was short range, but we believe the tracker was capable of hooking on to unsecured wireless networks as well. I believe that’s why it took them so long to locate us in Finland. They didn’t have precise coordinates.”

“And when we landed in Romania, the pendant found a network to connect and signal our position,” I complete, my voice tight.

Dries takes one of the pendant’s broken pieces and studies it with piercing eyes. “At least now we’re free to move.”

I fight the laces tightening around my throat. “But Viktor is dead.”

Isiporho nods, an unexpected sadness shadowing his eyes. “We found him at the casino.”

Killed by Stiles, or one of his men . . . I look down at March’s and my joined hands. A lone spark lights up in my long-abused neurons. “Odysseus . . . did Erwin say anything about it?”

That sends Dries’s brow shooting upward in an expression of genuine surprise that looks almost foreign on his features. “Is anyone not looking for that wreck these days?”

Excellent question . . . “So he mentioned it too?” I say, springing back to life. “Stiles told me he thought I was even more precious to Anies than Odysseus. I knew there was something!”

March strokes my wrist pensively, searching Dries’s now-shuttered expression. “There’s a nuclear reactor inside the ship . . . do you think the Lions could have stolen it? To bargain with the US government?”

Isiporho leans back in his chair and runs a hand across his chin. “Eish . . .”

Dries gazes past us, through the window, as if lost in a world of his own. It seems the energy that continuously drives him past all obstacles has deserted him. “‘All men dream,’” he says slowly, “‘but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act on their dreams with open eyes, to make them possible.’”

I get the feeling he’s quoting someone, but there’s nothing to retrieve from the empty shelves of my brain. “Is that from somewhere?”

He remains silent. I don’t like that he shut down on us—or maybe what upsets me is the realization that even he can be rattled.

March eventually answers for him. “Lawrence of Arabia wrote that, in the Seven Pillars of Wisdom.”

“Okay, so . . .”

“We’re going to need your boy,” Dries tells March, his knuckles rapping on the table—a sure sign that his personal brand of unflappable determination is back. “That little poes who hacked Auben’s phone in Rio. What was his name?”

“Colin,” March replies. “Colin Jeon.”

“Who’s that?” I ask.

He winks at me. “Someone who’ll be happy to see you.”

Isiporho leaves the table to retrieve a small laptop from a metal case, which he hands to March. “I installed your game. Is that really how you contact him?”

March nods, his fingers flying fast on the keyboard to launch a colorful window. I watch in perplexity as he logs on to . . . Kawaii Farm. He selects his character, a little ostrich with huge eyes wearing jeans overalls and a straw hat. God, it even has a little rake: this is so cute! The map loads, and March’s ostrich runs across flower fields and orchards, guided by the direction keys.

I go through the stats panel at the bottom of the screen. Whoever this Colin person is, March didn’t play Kawaii Farm just to contact him . . . 67 orchards, 223 crop fields, over 400 hamsters working the fields full time for minimum wage, a staggering ten million “coinz” stashed at the Kawaii Bank of Investment, gold-shovel medal, platinum-wheelbarrow trophy . . . March’s ostrich has built an empire.

Meanwhile, the bird leaps among coconut trees and tropical pink flowers, all the way to another farm. He knocks at the door of a turtle-shaped house, prompting the launch of a chat window.

He starts typing. “Would you be interested in purchasing a mithril rake?”

Dries, Isiporho, and I wait with bated breath as the door creaks open, and a little turtle with equally large and shiny eyes appears—a ninja turtle, judging by the shuriken secured to its shell by a yellow belt.

“Anyone else bidding on it?” the turtle asks.

March’s lips stretch into a rare grin. “No, only me and my girlfriend.”

Barely a second after he’s pressed the enter key, the 3-D scenery dissolves into a shimmering dust of pixels until the screen turns black and a video conference window pops up. A young Asian guy sits in a big blue gaming chair behind a cluttered desk. Jet chin-length hair curtains his glasses, and I make a mental note of his green Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles T-shirt: someone’s a fan . . . He combs his bangs back with his fingers, and an ecstatic grin lights up his face. “Oh my God, you’re seriously back!”

I smile in return, because the joy bubbling inside me instinctively tells me he’s a friend. “Yeah . . . I guess I’m back.”

Behind the glasses, his eyes train on March, and his mouth purses in solemn admiration. “You’re hardcore . . . If you print Struthio T-shirts, I’ll buy one.”

“Struthio?” I ask March, searching my memory for everything he told me last night. “It’s that private security business you founded after you stopped . . . um . . . killing people?” I realize as I say this that he hasn’t really stopped, but at least he tried, so I guess it’s a good start.

Colin’s eyebrows pinch at my comment about Struthio. I offer him an apologetic wince. “Sorry . . . I don’t remember everything. I’m still catching up.”

Shock registers on his face and, right afterward, sadness. “But . . . you remember me, right?”

On the table, March’s hand squeezes mine as I answer, “No . . . I’m sorry. No.”

Colin slumps in his chair, looking even younger as he clasps a hand over his mouth, looking devastated. Somehow I feel like I’ve failed this guy I don’t even remember, and that’s only the tip of the iceberg: there’s an entire life to learn all over again, and so many people who’ll feel like Colin . . . like March felt when I wouldn’t let him in.

“It’s gonna be okay,” I say softly. “We can get to know each other again, and maybe someday I’ll remember.”

Colin gives an uncertain nod and seems to relax until Dries pops up behind me. The moment he sees him, his face scrunches up in visible dismay.

Dries greets him with a carnivorous smile. “Yes, it’s me again. And you’re going to sing for me, or I’ll find you, and I’ll plastinate your—”

“That’s unnecessary,” March cuts him off dryly. “I already explained to you that our relations with Mr. Jeon are nothing but cordial.”

“That little snitch works for the NSA,” Dries snaps. “He might as well report to Erwin directly . . .”

“But I don’t!” Colin counters in outrage. “And he already told you not to threaten me like that.”

“All right, all right.” Dries waves off Colin’s complaint. “Odysseus—what do you know about it?”

Colin sobers and leans on his desk. “That it was awesome, but NASA lost it at the bottom of Litke Deep, and their congressional hearing won’t go well?”

“And what can you tell us that we won’t hear on television?” March probes.

He cringes. “One day they’re gonna find my body, and it’ll be all your fault. You know that, right?”

Dries glares at Colin. “And they’ll find it much sooner than you expect if you don’t start talking.”

I elbow him discreetly with a disapproving look while, behind me, Isiporho stifles a laugh at their antics. Colin shakes his head and starts typing on his keyboard. On-screen, a map of the Arctic Ocean pops up in a new window. A cursor appears over a dark blue spot, not far from a cluster of frozen islands. “That’s Litke Deep, about a hundred miles north of the archipelago of Svalbard.” The cursor glides half an inch down. “And that point here, that’s where they think Odysseus crashed.”

“That’s not in Litke Deep,” I say. “Was it carried north by sea currents? I mean, it weighs two thousand tons . . .”

Colin sighs. “Probably not.” Another window flashes on-screen, containing what I recognize as a spectrogram. Represented with a pattern of bright colors forming columns is a series of powerful, low-frequency sounds. There’s a date in the bottom right corner: October 17—recorded two months ago. “What did they record?” I ask.

“A whale, of course.” When he sees my mouth twist in doubt, Colin laughs. “That’s what Zwicky is gonna tell Congress tomorrow anyway.”

“That a giant whale sank their trillion-dollar spaceship?”

“That should go over well . . .” March comments with a sigh.

Colin shrugs. “Better than telling them we suspect it’s a nuclear submarine signature.”

My jaw goes slack, and I hear March’s eyebrows shoot up.

“Unconfirmed?” Dries asks, his fingers rapping on the table.

“Kinda not entirely confirmed,” Colin replies. “Let’s put it like this: you’d need something pretty powerful to tow a hundred-foot ship, and the docking would be noisy . . .”

“And?” Dries insists, his nostrils flaring.

Colin squirms in his chair. “Something like the brand-new type 099 the Chinese lost a year ago, along with a dozen nuclear warheads. Which is totally a rumor, and maybe it’s still being tested in a secret location like their official news agency is telling everyone . . .”

There’s a beat of silence in the briefing room as the enormity of the news sets in. It’s Isiporho, having been listening quietly until now, who first manages to speak. “The brothers . . . stole a nuclear submarine to tow Odysseus?”

Colin’s eyes widen until I fear they’re going to roll out. “Oh, my fucking God! The Lions did it?”

Dries sends him a murderous glare. “They didn’t,” he hisses. “And the quieter you are, the longer you’ll live.”

In my ears, their voices are muted, a distant din when my thoughts have concentrated, narrowed down to a single point. The butterfly. Anies brought it back from his trip to the factory . . . “It’s in Ecuador,” I say out loud.

March’s fingers lace with mine, his features taut with worry as he listens to me.

“Anies said he’d take me to Ecuador with him when his project was complete. He’s been shipping things there for months; it was his obsession. He said”—my voice falters—“that it’d be a surprise.”

And what a surprise. If he really crossed that line . . . I can’t imagine what he’s cooking there, but none of the scenarios my brain slaps together are any less than disastrous. With the combined power of Odysseus’s reactor and the warheads that were in that Chinese submarine . . . he could wipe a small country from the map.

I’ll give you even more. An entire new world . . .

I’m still breathing, but my throat is so tight I’m not sure the oxygen is reaching my lungs. “We need to find that ship . . . I think he’s gonna make a huge mistake.”

A strong, warm hand squeezes my shoulder. I look up to find Dries gazing at me. In his eyes, the gold darkens as he tells March, “I’ll go make a call of my own.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Alexa Riley, Sophie Stern, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Frankie Love, Jenika Snow, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Michelle Love, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Amelia Jade, Piper Davenport, Eve Langlais,

Random Novels

Follow by Tessa Bailey

Wild Irish: One Wild Finn (Kindle Worlds Novella) (The Finn Factor Book 9) by R.G. Alexander

Low Down & Dirty by Addison Moore

Stryder: The Second Chance Billionaire (The Billionaire Cowboys of Clearwater County Book 1) by Bonnie R. Paulson

If You Dare by Kresley Cole

Down the Dirt Road (The Dirt Road Series Book 1) by Livell James, Chelsea Handcock

The Good, The Bad, And The Scandalous (The Heart of a Hero Book 7) by Cora Lee, The Heart of a Hero Series

Hold On (The Hold Series Book 4) by Arell Rivers

by Delia Castel

The Four Horsemen: Hunted by LJ Swallow

King Dragon: An Alien Dragon Shifter's Fantasy Romance (Winged Beasts Book 5) by Crystal Dawn

Fury on Fire by Sophie Jordan

Draco Family Duet by Emma Nichols

The Promise (Luck of the Irish Book 3) by Tracy Lorraine

Second to None (A Second Glances Novella) by Nancy Herkness

My Best Friend's Brother: A Steamy Older Man Younger Woman Romance by Mia Madison

Say You Love Me (Pine Valley Book 3) by Heather B. Moore

Constant Craving by Tamara Lush

Charming Hannah (The Big Sky Series Book 1) by Kristen Proby

Working Vacation by Annabelle Love