“How long have you been here?” she asked quietly.
His mouth twisted into a snarl, his fangs extended slightly as he turned now blood colored eyes toward the darkened window across from her. “Too long,” he growled. “Over a week now, maybe even two.”
Cassie gaped at him in surprise. They had been worried about him hunting in their town, and he had been locked in here almost the entire time. “But how did you get here?”
“Same way as you I suppose, that little bitch Grounder of yours.”
“Dani?” Cassie squeaked, her thoughts turning instantly to Annabelle and Chris. Were they ok? What had Dani done to them? She did not believe that they were in here with her; Dani had said that they had been taken care of. But what exactly did that mean? Had she hurt them, or simply left them incapable of trying to defend Cassie?
Cassie shuddered, fighting hard not to shed the tears of frustration, terror, and anger burning her eyes. They had to be ok; she needed them to be ok. But as of now, there was absolutely nothing that she could do about it, other than hope that Dani still had enough decency in her not to hurt innocent people. Cassie didn’t know how likely that was considering the fact that Dani had so easily turned on her.
“How is that possible, Dani was with us?” she whispered.
“I didn’t say she was the one that took me,” he mumbled. “I’m just assuming that she had a hand in it. They knew where I was hunting, knew what my ability was, and knew how to take me. Her brother has one hell of an ability too.”
Cassie’s eyebrows shot up, her eyes darted nervously toward the glass. She hoped that they weren’t listening to them, but she highly doubted it. “Joey? What can he do, and how do you know he’s her brother?”
“Yes, Joey,” he rumbled. His eyes were intent upon her. “How do you not know what one of your own can do?”
Cassie glowered at him, her hands clenched on the thin blanket upon the cot. “We didn’t all keep in touch after The Slaughter,” she retorted sharply. “Hell Chris and I didn’t even know what we were until we were thirteen, and there is no way to know how many Hunter’s are left out there, never mind what they are capable of.”
“Ahh The Slaughter,” Julian sighed softly, his eyes became distant and fond. Cassie’s temper prickled; a slow rippling flowed through her at the joy she sensed beneath his words. Joy at the fact that he had helped participate in the event that had nearly decimated her race, and destroyed her parents. “Good times.”
“Screw you!” she spat, launching to her knees as a burst of rage flowed through her. “Screw you, you ass!”
Julian’s eyes narrowed upon her, a small smile quirked his mouth. Cassie’s hands fisted at her sides, she wished the glass wasn’t between them because she desperately wanted to punch him, wanted to pummel that smug look off his face. “Angry now princess?”
Cassie wanted to feel the flash of rage, suddenly wanted to lose control because she was fairly certain she could rip this glass apart to get at him if she did. But though she wanted it, and though she felt the slow slither of it coiling within her, the full force of it would not come forth. Helplessness and frustration filled her, burying the anger beneath the tidal wave of self pity that threatened to consume her. Cassie slumped back, her head bowed as she folded her hands before her.
“What have they done to me?” she whispered.
Julian sighed, his hands slid down the window as he knelt before her. She lifted her head to meet his steady gaze. She had expected to see smugness still in his gaze; instead there was understanding, and compassion. Cassie was taken aback, her eyes widened as he continued to study her intently.
“They’ve drugged you princess, and like me, you are unable to fully break through the effect of those drugs. I was hoping that you would be different, because you are different, but apparently they have taken that fact into account.”
He sat back on his heels, running his hand wearily through his disordered hair. His gaze went slowly to the window behind her. Cassie glanced sharply up at the vents wondering what they were pumping into the room; she was suddenly very tired and weary. “How did they get you?”
“That little bitch’s nut job brother…”
“Joey,” she supplied, stifling a yawn.
He scowled down at her, folding his thickly muscled arms over his broad chest. “You call him what you want to, and I’ll call him what I want to. Nut job has telekinesis, the ability to move things with his mind,” he elaborated at her confused look. “Three of them took me down with electricity, and one with a drugged dart. Then nut job pinned me down like a damn bug while the others came forward to drug me even further. Freaks.”
Cassie quirked an eyebrow at him, she was unable to stifle her next yawn. “It’s a war remember, you were just enjoying reminiscing about the near destruction of my race. This war has been going on for over a thousand years. I thought you, of all people, would enjoy it.”
His eyes darkened, his hands pressed flat against the glass once more. He leaned toward her, his nose nearly touching the glass as he stared at her. “War’s result in blood and death. If they had killed me that would be understandable, honorable even, but this is a bloody freak show! This is not war; this is a bunch of madmen who have lost their minds.”
Cassie stared sleepily up at him; a shiver worked its way through her at his words. He was right, they were madmen. And it had been madmen and scientists that created the Hunter line to begin with. Cassie’s fingers dug into her arms as she tried to keep herself under control and free of panic.
“Just like they did before,” she mumbled her eyes darting fearfully back to the shadowed glass.
“Yes,” Julian agreed softly. “Just like before, except now we are the ones trapped in these cages like rats.”
She couldn’t help but give him an amused look. “So you would rather be dead then?”
“Wouldn’t you?”
Her smile slipped swiftly away. A shudder tore through her at the mere thought of what they might do, of what they were going to do them. And she was fairly certain that even her worst fears didn’t begin to scratch the surface of what these monsters intended for the two of them. She had never truly wanted to die. There had been a brief period, after her grandmother’s death, where she had considered her life nearly over, and she had not been frightened by that fact. But, she had not truly wanted to die, no matter how much she had thought she did. But now, well now she found that she might end up vastly preferring death to their current circumstances.