45: A Great Operative
Predatory
SASHA POV
Where am I?
Soft. Comfortable. Not movingâno rumble, no jazz. Pleasant lightâmaybe low lamps, maybe fireplace. Wood beams and plaster overhead. Blankets around me.
But somethingâs missing.
With effort, turn head, look around. Fake fireplace. No windows. A door, closed. A couple chairsâ
Samson.
Thatâs right. Flashes come backâthe medics, the stretcher. Exam room, all sterile white. Poking, prodding, PAIN. Missing something there, tooâcold, lonely.
âGood morning,â Samson greets me. âHow ya feelinâ?â
I stretch a little, testing. Still aches everywhere.
âSore. Tired,â I tell him. âWhere Rika? Zoe?â
âRestinâ, anâ theyâve earned it. Hell of a task, tâ get you anâ them lycans all the way out here. Anâ they saved your life, my medics told me. Youâve got some nasty injuries, but Iâm told theyâre healing all right. Doctorâll be in soon tâ check ya over, change dressings anâ all that.â
âThank you.â
âBefore that, though, Iâd like tâ ask ya some questions, âbout how ya got so banged up. You up to answerinâ âem?â
âI do my bestâ¦Commander.â
âHey now. None oâ that. The way yer friends tell it, you outrank me now.â
âShouldnât. Donât want Anselm job.â
âThen whyâd ya duel âim for it?â
âOnly wayâ¦avoid execute innocent.â
âIâm gonna need ya to explain that a bit more.â
âAnselm showed upâ¦while I was in field. With target. Ordered me to execute. I said not enough evidence. He insisted. I challenged.â
âTo be clear, the target was one oâ them lycans who came here with you?â
âYes.â
âIâd guess the one who was ridinâ in the back with you?â
Drake.
âYes.â
âHe seems pretty attached to you.â Samsonâs eyes too intense. Look at ceiling instead.
âShouldnât be.â
âBut he is. Anâ Iâd guess Anselm didnât like that.â
How to answer? Donât know. Anselm always pissy.
âWhat were the terms of yer duel with Anselm?â Samson asks.
âTo death,â I answer. Shouldâve been obvious.
âDid he want to kill you?â
âHe wantedâ¦âuntil surrender.â But neither of us do surrender.â Deep breath. Hurts ribs. âHe said when I lose, he kill Drake instead.â
Samson nods. Expected that?
âBut you didnât lose,â he prompts.
âNo. Anselm dead.â
âIf you didnât want his job, whyâd ya kill Anselm, rather than jusâ knock âim out? To protect Drake?â
âWanted Anselm dead. To avenge my family.â
âYour familyâ¦.â Realization dawns. âYour father was Simon Sukoshku.â
Tears prick eyes. So long, since someone else said his name.
âHe was a great operative. And a great man,â Samson continues, gentle, soft. âWould have liked to have him in the Underground, if Iâd gotten the chance. But Anselm got to âim first, after that incident with the dryads. That execution was the catalyst for startinâ the Underground, actually. Didnât sit well with any of us. If weâd known that he left any oâ Simonâs family aliveâ¦.â
Underground. Samsonâs resistance to WASP. He mentioned, while I was still in car.
âThank you. For remembering him,â I choke out. No cry. No weakness.
âHeâs the sort who ought to be remembered. But, if ya donât mind me askinââ¦. You were there, when they were executed?â
âYes.â
âAnâ Anselmâ¦decided to spare you?â
âI fought back. He saw potential. Wanted to use it. Wouldnât let me die.â Neither would Rika, at HQ. Tried, many times. Until I realized couldnât make Anselm pay if I was dead.
âYou mustâve hated him. Whyâd you work for him so long?â
âOnly way to learn how to kill him. And get skills to do it.â
Samson makes quiet whistle. âAnâ he never had any idea.â
âSeems not.â
âWell then. He was right about yer potential. Ainât no accident they say youâre the best in WASP.â
âDonât want to be. You should take Anselmâs job.â
Samson surprised. âYears ago, I woulda taken you up on that, no questions asked.â
âWhat stop you now?â
âYou want tâ see WASP change anâ become better, donâtcha?â
âYes. But you better for job. More experience.â
âNow, I donât know âbout that. You already know all the ins anâ outs oâ special ops, âcuz youâve been workinâ in it. Anâ I expect all the other special ops know you anâ respect you already. Even if they donât, Anselm had a reputation as fearsomeâunbeatable, evenâin single combat. If I hadnât seen what you done against Svartheron, Iâd find it real hard tâ believe that you took Anselm down. You ainât likely tâ have underlings challenginâ yer authority. Anâ I got the Underground to run.â
âCan still run Underground in Anselmâs job.â
âMaybe. But I think those of us who want to see WASP reformed are better off if you take the job. You anâ I can accomplish more workinâ together than if I try to do it all alone.â
Quiet groan slips out. Heâs not wrong. But I donât want Anselmâs job. Donât like WASP, donât like bureaucracy. Anselm death should mean freedom.
âI know Iâm askinâ a lot. Anâ none of usâve done right by you. If weâd known one oâ Simonâs kittens made it outâ¦.â Samson sighs, shakes head. âBut itâs too late for that now, anâ Iâm sorry for it. I wish there was a better way, or a chance tâ do things different knowinâ what I know now. But there ainât, as far as I can tell, anâ the way things stand now, I think youâre exactly the kind oâ shake-up the WASP brass needs. Anâ of course, youâll have the full might of the Underground behind you.â
He wants me lead revolution from inside.
I donât think I can do it.
âYou ainât gotta commit to nothinâ now,â Samson assures me. âNo way are you goinâ to HQ until youâre completely healed. Mustâve been a helluva fight, between you anâ Anselm. Almost wish Iâd gotten to see it. But we got time for thinkinâ and talkinâ and planninâ about what comes next. Try to rest. Doctorâll be in soon.â
âOkay,â I breathe. No strength to argue now.
âThank you for answerinâ all my questions. I know itâs been tough. Jusâ one more thing, before I leave ya be. That Drakeâs been askinâ tâ see you. You want tâ see him, or no?â
He still wants me.
Heâs a fool.
âSure.â The word leaves my lips without permission.
Maybe fool is me.