Infiltrate_Retribution Page 2
and what I’d seen or almost seen this
morning—a girl thinking of jumping off
a bridge to end her life—my tolerance for
drama was at an all-time low.
The overhead lights popped on.
“And here I thought you had ninja
skills.” Jo’s voice was thick with sleep and
her usual feisty attitude.
“I should have known.” Occasionally
Jo crashed at my place when she needed
14
i n f i l t r a t e
to keep her head down. Get even further
off grid than she normally was. Not that
many could track a girl who’d spent years
on the streets, learning to blend. To be
invisible.
Survive.
Jo and I had an open-door policy
now that I’d personally seen to vastly
improving her previously limited B-and-E
skills. She would never need a key to open
a standard deadbolt again.
“I thought I told you to stop moving
stuff.” Since Jo was already awake,
I spent a few seconds putting everything
back in its proper place. One bonus of
a liveaboard—small boat equals easy-
peasy cleanup. Besides the tiny galley
kitchen, Big Daddy had one narrow
stateroom and a bench in the cabin that
pulled out into a berth. Where Jo was
currently sleeping.
“ocd much?” Jo snorted, pulling the
comforter back over her head.
15
j u d i t h g r a v e s
I immediately yanked it off. “ged
ever?”
Jo groaned. “Not this again. I’m not
going to your stupid school, or Jace’s, or
any education institution with teachers
and doors and walls.” She propped herself
up on an elbow. “You know they practice
lockdowns in schools and trap everyone
inside, right?”
I frowned. “That’s not how it works—”
“And ged? Please. If I needed it,
Bentley could hack my way to a doctorate
in rocket science, and I could forge the
degree on the wall myself.” Jo slumped
back under the covers. “I’ll take my
chances in the real world, thanks.”
I would have argued about her flawed
logic and how our rooftop stakeouts,
chop-shop takedowns and encounters
with corrupt cops were infinitely more
dangerous than the public education
system, but my heart wasn’t in it. All I
could think about was the bridge.
16
i n f i l t r a t e
“I don’t know. The real world can be
pretty overwhelming to some people.”
“Are you saying you want to skip school
and binge-watch Netflix? Because I am so
up for that. What are you in the mood for?
Funny? Scary?” She gave a knowing grin.
“How about a police procedural, since
you’re dating a cop’s son and all.”
“Ha-ha, I’m so amused.” I crossed my
arms. I knew my next words would suck
the funny right out of Jo. “I saw a girl this
morning. She was about to jump off the
Burrard Street Bridge.”
Jo’s face paled. She sat upright. “Are
you serious?”
“Not something I’d joke about.
I interrupted her, but she took off
before I could get any closer.” I rubbed
at the knotted muscles in my neck,
flinching when I skimmed my nape. My
infinity tattoo had passed the scabbing
phase, but the skin was still sensitive.
The entire team had gotten the same ink
17
j u d i t h g r a v e s
in a show of solidarity and a “screw you”
to those who’d thought they had control
over us. We wouldn’t be squashed down.
The future was ours for the taking.
I felt more centered just thinking
about the tattoo and what it stood for.
What the team meant to me. The girl
on the bridge probably could have used
a symbol of hope like that. A few good
people to stand by her.
“It’s sticking with me, you know?”
A quick glance at the microwave’s glowing
red numbers. “Got to shake it off. I have
to hustle or I’ll be late for first block.”
“Raven, this is traumatic stuff. We
should talk it out.”
“Ah, no thanks.” I didn’t know why
I’d said anything to Jo in the first place. I
had to put the morning behind me.I shot
a mournful look at my coffeemaker. No
time for my morning fix. Diesel might
have made sure I avoided my parents’
fate, but caffeine was a true addiction.
18
i n f i l t r a t e
I’d been drinking the stuff since before I’d
hot-wired my first car.
“I’m going to grab a shower and head
to school.”
“Okaay.” Jo drawled out the word.
I knew she wanted to keep digging at
me, and I held my breath for the rush of
questions that, thankfully, never came.
“Just don’t use all the hot water,” she
said.
Big Daddy’s hot-water tank was
practically a tall bucket. The water would
go from steaming to freezing in about
four minutes, especially if I had the thing
on full blast.
I let out an evil laugh.
“Ah, come on, Raven…”
19
FOUR
“I don’t get it. What are we supposed to
do?” Joel gnawed on the end of his pencil.
“Read the assignment,” Brooke
prompted. “Out loud this time.”
Lucky me. I’d been teamed up with
these two geniuses for a group history
project.
Joel sighed. “Fine. It says, Describe the
steps that led to Canada achieving autonomy
from Britain. Then there’s something
about a line graph and a few dates we
have to mention.”
“What’s autonomy again?”
20
i n f i l t r a t e
Was I the only one who’d done the
assigned reading? “Autonomy,” I said.
“Freedom. Independence. You know, how
Canada became its own country?” Two sets
of eyes blinked. Clueless. I choked back a
groan. “I can see how this is going to go.”
I propped my feet, clad in faded black Doc
Martens, on one of the empty chairs. “I’ll
do all the real work, and you guys will
focus on coloring inside the lines.”
“Nice! Why not tell us how you really
feel?” Brooke seemed to give up at that
point. She flopped back in her chair and
proceeded to lose herself in her cell phone.
“We have to color?” Joel skimmed the
assignment. “It doesn’t say anything here
about coloring.”
Completely clueless. Before I could
lose it on him, Brooke jabbed her cell in
the air between us.
“You have to see thi
s. A girl from
our school just jumped off a bridge, and
someone posted it online.” She pressed
21
j u d i t h g r a v e s
Play, squinting at the hazy footage.
“Oh wow, that’s Kendra Wallace. She’s in
my chemistry class.”
Brooke enlarged the narrow image
flickering across the screen. Whoever
took the footage had made a quick pass
along the bridge before focusing on
the small form perched on the railing.
My heart sank at the view of Burrard
Street Bridge in the fog.
My eyes locked on the screen.
Almost the exact scene I’d witnessed that
morning, only this time there were a lot
of people on the bridge trying to talk
the girl down. Down she went all right.
One second she was there. Wavering.
Leaning forward. Then she was gone.
“No way.” Joel gasped. “Now that’s
what I call autonomy. Freedom on your
own terms, all the way. Play it again.”
Really? How could they watch a girl do
that to herself? And how could I have left,
knowing what she’d tried to do earlier?
22
i n f i l t r a t e
I should have waited around. Watched to
see if she came back. This was Supersize
all over again. The young apprentice I’d
been training to climb. The kid who’d
died because I hadn’t been watching out
for him like I should have.
Bile flooded the back of my mouth.
I stood abruptly, knocking Brooke’s cell
from her hand. It clattered onto her desk.
“Hey…” she started to complain over
the loud ringing of the school bell.
But I was already bolting for the door.
I squeezed into the hall that was
crammed with bodies making their way
to their next class. My cell pulsed in the
back pocket of my skinny jeans.
Very few people had my number.
I moved closer to the lockers and out
of the direct line of traffic. I checked my
phone. A text. From Bentley.
WE GOT A LIVE ONE.
Not Code Red, since the team had
declared hatred for the phrase when I
23
j u d i t h g r a v e s
used it, but someone must have reached
out to us, needing our particular brand of
assistance.
THE BAT CAVE. 9 PM.
It made my heart lighter to know
Bentley could make me laugh out loud
when, seconds before, I had been ready
to heave up my guts. I fired him a quick
response, telling him I’d be there with
nunchucks on. Jo had called me a ninja.
I tucked my cell back in my pocket and
started toward the chem lab.
A sudden solid grip on my arm had
me whirling in anger.
“Get off me, creeper, or I’ll…”
Um, yeah, what would I do? Words
failed me. The buzzing activity of the
hallway faded into the background as
I stared up into the one face I couldn’t
stop thinking about.
“That’s the best you can do? Creeper?”
Laughter edged Emmett’s voice. “You
must have skipped your morning pot of
coffee.”
24
i n f i l t r a t e
I groaned. “Don’t remind me. I’m
fighting off a killer withdrawal headache.”
I frowned. “How did you know I can’t
function without java in the morning?”
Squinting in mock anger, I guessed, “Are
you having me watched? Your dad got a
man on me?”
Emmett scoffed. “I do my own
investigating, thanks. No need to tap into
police resources. I took a sip from the water
bottle you always drag around. I know
about the coffee.” He avoided my gaze.
To my fascination, a flush worked up
his jaw.
Only Emmett could blush at having to
admit he’d swiped a drink without asking.
Ever the law-abiding citizen.
“Only it wasn’t water. Cold coffee
tastes like…like…” He grimaced. “I don’t
know, it’s just disgusting.”
Laughing, I shook my head. “That’s
what you get for the grabby hands.”
Emmett’s gaze glittered with interest.
Now it was my turn to blush.
25
j u d i t h g r a v e s
“I’ll take whatever I can get from you,
Raven.” He stared down at me from his
substantial height advantage. “You know
that.”
I sucked in a breath. He certainly knew
how to throw me off balance with a few
smooth lines. Emmett had removed his
hand from my arm the moment he got my
attention, and I wanted to drag it back in
place again. I liked it when he touched me.
When we connected. Probably too much.
“But since you mentioned my dad…”
Emmett shifted on his feet. “He asked
about you. Wants you to come to the
house.” His eyes met mine. “He’ll grill up
some steaks. I can’t promise the food will
be any good, he usually burns everything,
but come anyway.”
This was unexpected. I retreated a
step. “When?”
“Tonight.”
Another strategic retreat. “I can’t.”
Emmett moved forward, closing in.
“Why not?”
26
i n f i l t r a t e
“I have a thing.” I took a step to the
left.
Emmett countered. “With Jo and
the guys? Maybe I can help. I’ve helped
before.”
“I know, but it’s no big deal.” I had no
idea if it was or wasn’t, but I wanted to
keep Emmett and the team as separate as
possible. His dad meant well, but he was a
cop. Sure, he’d been a solid resource in the
past, but he couldn’t be thrilled that his
son had taken a shine to a girl who walked
on the far side of the law. Plus Emmett
was the one thing I had all to myself. He
was pure. And clean. And good. I wanted
him to stay that way.
“It’s just a thing.” Glancing around,
I took in the empty hallway. “We’re late
for class.” I deked around his tense body.
“I have to go.”
“Raven…”
“I can’t, Emmett. I’m sorry.”
“My dad won’t stop.” He didn’t
take my arm again—he didn’t have to.
27
j u d i t h g r a v e s
His low words had me frozen at his side.
“He wants answers. I know I said I
wouldn’t push, that I’d wait until you were
ready, but I worry about you. Every day.”
His voice hardened a little. “If you’re such
a risk taker, why not take a chance on me?
Why can’t you let me in?” Then he turned
and walked away, without looking back.
He didn’t get it.
I could let him in.
All too easily.
That’s what I was afraid of.
28
FIVE
At the back corner of the chem lab,
I toiled over several beakers, feeling like
a modern-day Victor Frankenstein—you
know, without the reanimated corpse.
Still, the setting was just about right.
Rows of glass-door cabinets filled with
ominous-looking jars and metal devices.
Sterile workstations and double stainless-
steel sinks. And twenty-two other mad
scientists hard at work on their creations.
“All right, folks,” Ms. Scott said from
behind her own station at the front of
the class, “let’s get started. Remember
to take a temperature reading with your
29
j u d i t h g r a v e s
thermometer every thirty seconds.”
She held up her hands. “And whatever
you do, do not try to cool thermometers
between uses. If you place a hot
thermometer in cold water, it will crack,
and I will not be happy.”
A few students snickered. I fought a
grin. The only thing that might crack was
Scott’s face if she tried to smile. I didn’t
think the woman was ever happy.
“Instead,” she continued, “wipe them
off with the paper towel I’ve provided.”
Scott glanced at her handheld timer.
“And…go.”
The entire class got to work.
I turned on the Bunsen burners
and prepared to take notes on the
different reaction times. The point of the
experiment was to pinpoint the melting
and freezing points of various liquids.
Water. Vegetable oil. And an unknown
sample that looked and smelled like urine.
Ugh. I so hoped it wasn’t, because then I
30
i n f i l t r a t e
wouldn't have to think about who or what
kind of critter provided the goods.
The experiment reminded me of
Team Retribution and how we were
different, yet the same. We each had our
own reaction times, some quicker to boil
than others. There was hotheaded Jo,
and then Jace, so cool and calculating.
Bentley, always simmering but never out
of control. But we all wanted the same
thing—justice.
The sharp, unmistakable popping
sound of shattering glass broke the intense
silence and the zone I’d slipped into.
Uh-oh. Someone hadn’t listened to Scott.
Amateurs.
The sudden commotion from the
middle of the room had the entire class and
Ms. Scott staring in shock. What the…?
Two guys faced off in the aisle between
workstations. I recognized the taller one,