original aims of Silence, it best matches a psychopathic personality profile.”
A bark of laughter from Arran that made Suriana jump and Bjorn jerk upright. But the other anchor wasn’t looking at either of them. He was grinning at Payal. “I definitely want her representing us,” he said to Canto, his body more relaxed than Canto had ever seen it. “Can you imagine her using that take-no-shit voice against Krychek?”
“It’s not about ‘against,’” Payal said before Canto could reply. “The members of the Ruling Coalition aren’t our enemies. They are allies.”
“Agreed,” Canto said. “Their only mistake was in not bringing anchors to the table—but that was a decision put into play generations ago, well before any of us were born—and Designation A played a major role in our invisibility.” Canto wasn’t about to allow his designation to skate on past mistakes.
“So,” he said, “do we have a consensus? That we’re now a team that represents anchors, with Payal as our public voice?” Their general forged in a burn of ice and survival.
A round of nods—and a small salute from Arran.
Payal, meanwhile, showed no outward reaction to the outcome. She simply uncrossed her legs and said, “Then it’s time to make our first move.”
SOPHIA Russo’s official title was special advisor to Ruling Coalition member Nikita Duncan. Her duties and responsibilities, however, had grown significantly since she took on the position. She’d told Nikita that she’d never lie to her—and that she wasn’t afraid of her, either.
Both facts were true.
Not much scared a former Justice-Psy who’d walked in the minds of serial killers.
Sophia had openly opposed her boss’s stance on a number of matters; that she was still here spoke to the strength of their relationship. Sophia didn’t think she’d ever like Nikita, not when she knew so much of what the other woman had done, but she respected her.
Nikita had blood on her hands—but she also had a cardinal empath daughter she’d raised to adulthood. The same cardinal daughter who’d created the first major chink in Silence when she defected from the PsyNet. Also, unlike a number of notable others, Nikita had felt the winds of change and was moving with them rather than attempting to keep the Psy locked in a cold and Silent past.
So when the other woman asked her to look over Project Sentinel and give feedback, Sophia took care with the task. A headache pulsed at the back of her head by the time she was done, but that was nothing new. She’d been getting small headaches for weeks now, and she knew it had to do with the problems in the PsyNet.
Most Psy were anchored into the PsyNet by a single biofeedback link. Sophia, however, was interwoven so deeply into its fabric that she could never extricate herself. She felt no such desire—not when she knew how important her mind was to the Net. It was a tiny weight in the grand scheme of things, a tiny anchor at best, but it was an anchor. It also didn’t matter that she hadn’t been born an anchor, her attachment to the Net a result of childhood trauma; that her anchor point existed was now fact.
“That’s the problem with this plan,” she said to Nikita as the two of them walked down a long bridge that connected two parts of Duncan HQ in San Francisco. Clear water flowed under the bridge from the large water feature to the right—a flat wall of veined granite that had water running down it. The minerals in the rock sparkled in the morning sunlight in this part of the world.
“Explain,” Nikita said.
Sophia halted in the center of the bridge. “It has to do with the anchor who’ll be attached to the island.”
“The individual hasn’t yet been chosen.” The wedge of Nikita’s black hair was newly cut, the edges blunt and perfect. Her skirt-suit was a dark gray, the shirt she wore underneath a pristine white.
Sophia had gone for a dark green pantsuit today, paired with a white top that featured a ribbon woven through the high neckline. It wasn’t crisply Psy, but it was very Sophia—as she’d come to realize in the time since her emancipation from Silence.
“But,” Nikita continued, “it will be a strong and stable cardinal.”
Frowning, Sophia shook her head. “You need the input of a hub-A before things get to that point.” As a strange minor A, Sophia couldn’t quite see the shape of the problem, though it hovered on the edge of her consciousness. “I have a strong feeling