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get off me. And let’s test that theory, shall we? Move.” I shoved him as hard as I could manage, and he moved back a fraction of an inch, mostly out of courtesy.

      I leaned over, reaching for the blaster, and he caught me by the wrist again. His voice remained soft, in sharp contrast to mine. “Listen, you can’t. Life support is wired to his vitals. If he dies, we all do.”

      He paused, watching me. When he was sure his words had sunk in, his grip relaxed.

      A moment later, I let some of the tension fall from my own stance. “Okay. Let me go,” I said, more calmly. “All the way.”

      He backed up, looking pained, and took a seat in the chair again. His shoulders slumped a little, and he leaned forward, looking up at me from a much lower vantage point. It was about as non-threatening a stance as any I’d seen. He still made me nervous.

      “Sorry,” I said quietly.

      He nodded. “Me too.”

      “Can we switch it to someone else’s vitals? Maybe someone can hack in.”

      He shook his head. “The system is keyed to his heartbeat. No one can replicate that.”

      Adam was always a step ahead. “We’ll never be safe while he’s alive, Eren,” I said.

      Eren didn’t hear me. “So how did he attack you? Not that it matters, but shouldn’t he have been more like a puppet?”

      I shook my head. “He wasn’t in stasis. That’s for sure. You can’t make decisions in stasis. You can remember feelings, like fear or sorrow, but nothing concrete, like needing to attack someone.”

      “The Lieutenant would beg to differ,” Eren said dryly.

      “I don’t know how she did that, either. Adam must have some kind of automatic antidote. Or he saved the heavy doses just for me. Or he’s engineered a formula that only he’s immune to,” I mused. “There’s no telling. Anyway, he’s definitely out now.”

      Eren nodded, staring at the floor, the wall, Adam’s sleeping form, and finally, me. “Good. Because there’s something I need to tell you.”

       Five

      Eren yanked a stick-like gadget from Adam’s jacket and turned to the comm panel. I’d seen it once before, when Adam had used it to steal an Arkhopper. The panel hummed to life, and Eren pulled the comm device toward his mouth, keying a code into the board. A moment later, it lit up. “Everest to Tribune. Come in, Turner.”

      I stood straight, electrified.

      Eren looked back at me and grinned. I continued to gape until my voice bubbled up, and suddenly, I was shouting. “Dad? Dad, are you there?!”

      Eren held up a hand to quiet me.

      “You,” I hissed at him. “I have questions for you.”

      “He’s been in touch a few times a year. Keeps this line open. But he couldn’t get to you. Adam’s always watching.”

      “And you decided to keep it a secret? Of course you did. Dad! Where are you!”

      “We were trying to protect you, Charlotte. Just until we could get you out. And believe me, we have tried everything. It’s more complicated than you realize. We tried getting to her,” he nodded toward the Lieutenant, “but Adam must have kept her on a tight leash.” He shook his head a little. “We figured she was loyal to him. We tried constructing our own antidote, but he just changed the formula. Nothing ever worked.”

      The comm popped, and my father’s voice filled the room. It was intensely familiar, unchanged in the five years since I’d heard it. “Turner to Tribune Liaison. What’s the news, Eren?”

      “Dad!” I shouted. “Where are you?”

      There was a pause, then my father made a sound I couldn’t identify. “Charlotte,” he said slowly. “Eren, is that—is she—?”

      “She’s out of stasis,” said Eren. “And Adam’s down. For now.”

      “Dad! Where are you?” I repeated. “Did you make it to Europe?”

      “I’m here, Charlotte. I never left.”

      “But, how?

      “I called in every favor I had,” he said. “Every last one. That’s the short version, anyway.”

      He sounded like there was more to say, but Eren interrupted. “Sir, we need to move. We have to assume that Adam set traps. There’s no time.”

      “I’m ready,” my father answered. “Meet me at the dock in ten minutes sharp. Don’t be late.” There was a pause, and another sound, this one like a half-laugh. “Charlotte. Welcome back. It’s good to hear your voice again. It really is.”

      “You too, Dad,” I said. “We’ll be right there.”

      “Turner out,” he said, and the mic turned black again.

      I stared at the empty panel. My father was alive. We were going to be together. I took a deep breath.

       My father hadn’t left me.

      I angled toward the door, catching Eren’s eye. “Let’s go.”

      “Yeah,” he said slowly. “We should go.”

      I followed his frowning gaze to the Lieutenant. She was peacefully asleep, mere feet away from the most dangerous person I’d ever known. “I mean, it’s not the worst idea, you know? Leaving. Escaping. Staying alive.” I bit a lip. After all, she had chosen to work for Adam, hadn’t she?

      “We have no antidote,” Eren said. “She’s gonna stay in stasis until he comes around. Although, he is tied up.”

      “I guarantee that’s not gonna hold him once he’s awake. We could try to give her someplace to hide.”

      “There is no hiding on this ship, Char.” Eren sounded irritated. “Certainly not on the Guardian Level. Besides, she’s barely conscious.”

      “She’ll slow us down,” I said, but Eren just stood there, waiting.

      Finally, I sighed. “You’re not going to leave her, are you.” It wasn’t a question.

      He shook his head.

      I smiled in spite of myself. Maybe he hadn’t changed as much as I’d thought.

      “You get this side,” he said, putting her left arm around my shoulders. He ducked to lift her the rest of the way to her feet. “Perhaps it won’t be so bad.”

      I stood, supporting her. “Or perhaps she was acting on some kind of stasis-induced hallucination, and as soon as she snaps out of it, she’ll kill us all.”

      “Ever the optimist.” He returned the smile. “Let’s go. Watch the doorframe.”

      But something held me back. I stood there for a moment, trying to think, then slowly let go of her arm. “Hang on. We need a better plan.”

      “How did you put it? Escaping? Staying alive? This is a very good plan.” Eren made a face from the hallway. “Brilliant, even.”

      “No, it leaves us open. We need protection, Eren.”

      “Char—” he said softly.

      “Here’s the thing. If we take her—” I waved at the Lieutenant—“we save one person. It’s the wrong play.”

      Eren looked from corridor, to me, to Adam’s chair. “Oh, no you don’t. Now that is a bad plan.”

      “Hear me out,” I said hastily.

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