BLUEMANTLE Karen Langston (digital ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Karen Langston
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If he was going to protect Ursel, he knew he would have to act fast. It wouldnât be enough to get a message to her. He imagined her reaction, her perennial need to question why. He knew she wouldnât just accept it; sheâd need an explanation. Which meant he had to find a way to speak to her.
That meant a trip to the Circus.
As the crowds ambled towards the Telltaleâs big top, its streamer flags limp in the still evening air, Chase merged with the flow and attempted to disappear. He recognised a friend of Naylorâs and ingratiated himself upon her, trusting his instinct that the woman wasnât in the pockets of the A. To his relief, the woman, whose name he fought in vain to recall, remembered him. Hoping he might blend in more if he wasnât alone, he pulled out all the stops and managed to maintain small talk until safely within the sanctuary of the tent. Once inside, he crept around the back of the tiered stands, loitering while people checked tickets and located their seats. Then he climbed a metal stairway on one of the stands and slipped into a vacant seat on the back row.
The time it took for the gas lamps to dim and the space to fall into darkness felt interminable. Spotlights illuminated the stage and the performance began. Chase stepped onto his seat, climbed over the rail behind it and dropped to the floor.
âAre you going to tell me what all this is about?â hissed Ursel, emerging from the shadows. âAnd why in crowâs name the wig? I feel like an idiot.â
âQuiet. In here,â whispered Chase, ushering her beneath the stand, out of sight.
When he had passed security on the way in, he had handed the guard a sealed envelope. To his relief, it was the same guard who had let him pass when heâd visited Ursel before. Chase had pressed him with a wordless plea to deliver the envelope, on which Urselâs name was scrawled above the word âURGENTâ. The guard had hesitated, then read something in Chaseâs face and hurried off.
It was only blind desperation that had given Chase hope that his plan might work. Now that it had, with Ursel standing there, white-wigged and altered, he was taken aback. If the rest of his plan played out, he would be able to protect Ursel, find Wella and still give Wulfwin the details he wanted. If it brought about the end of the Scene, then Chase would get what he wanted too; but that was beyond his control. All he had to do was convince Ursel.
âThe A,â whispered Chase in the shadows. âI donât know why, but theyâre watching me.â
âOh, crow. Are you sure?â
âCertain. Since this morning.â
âI donât get it. Why you? Why now?â
âLike I say, I donât know. Maybe itâs linked to WeldonâŠâ He could see the whites of her eyes reflect what little light there was. âMaybe not. But it just seems, you know⊠I canât think why else. Anyway, it makes no odds. Theyâre watching me. I had to tell you, warn you to stay away. We canât be seen together.â
âI donât see whyââ
âYouâre part of the Scene. If they see me with you, they might take an interest. Iâd be putting you at risk. It doesnât matter if they see me with Naylor, or Tinashe, or the guys from work. As far as I know, the A would have nothing on them. But you. Youâre too involved. You know too much.â
Ursel let out a deep breath and crouched to the ground. Chase knelt down beside her. He tried to make out her features in the half-light, wishing he could see her eyes, her expression. âAnd what about you?â she said, her voice soft.
âIâll be okay. They canât know I was at Chiefâs show. They wouldâve hauled me in before now if they did. So, whatever they think theyâve got on me, itâs bullshit. Iâm not worried about me. Iâm worried about you.â He took a deep breath. âAnd Wella.â
âRight now, sheâs safer than you are.â
âThat may be so. But this doesnât change anything. I still have to at least try to speak to her.â
âWouldnât she rather have you alive than on some guilt-motivated mercy mission she doesnât even want?â She sensed Chase recoil. âWhat Iâm trying to say is think about what this means for the future, not the past. Even if you had cause to make amends, which I donât believe you do, this is not the way to do it.â
âAnd what about you? Knowing about your friend, Cole. Thatâs his name, isnât it? You said, if the A have got Cole, the Sceneâs finished. But youâll still go to the event, wonât you?â
âYes.â
âWhy?â
âLook, thatâs different.â
âBullshit. Itâs the same thing. Come on, you encouraged me to ask the question. So, why? If itâs about to end, why risk everything for this one final time?â
âBecause Iâve decided. Iâm not going to let it end.â
âWhat?â
âI was up all last night thinking about it. Iâve thought of nothing else. Thereâs nothing we can do to save Cole. He wonât crack and, once they realise that, theyâve no reason to keep him alive. If they do, heâll be banged up in Itherside Hold. And a trip to the Hold is only ever one-way.â She hung her head and sighed. âIt kills me to say it because, aside from what heâs done for the Scene, heâs also a good friend. It sounds like Iâm giving up on him, but I have to be realistic. They donât have to kill him to take his life. Either way, weâve lost Cole. I canât help him, but I can do something for him. Make it so that itâs not over. Iâve decided. Iâm going to pick up where
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