1
1
† Sage †
“She’s not pure.”
“What did you say?” My tongue was dry and I swallowed hard, wishing I hadn’t turned down the vitamin infused water the nurse offered in the waiting room. Dr. Bradley’s office was too clean. The walls were bare and lacking any sort of personal touch. Despite the minimalist design intended, it was suffocating.
Breathe.
I needed air.
“I’m sorry, Sage.” Dr. Bradley lowered his voice respectfully. Not out of respect for me though. His loyalty lay with my father and probably died with him too. “The tests aren’t wrong. I rechecked them myself. Her bloodwork came back with an anomaly and I’m required by law to report this.”
No, you aren’t. This wasn’t possible. It should have been me.
Not her.
I twisted my hands in my lap, still trying to process what was happening. “That’s not always true.”
“Your situation is different.” Dr. Bradley steepled his fingers under his chin and sighed. “A slight variation of optimal brain function can be swept under the rug as long as the patient continues to take medication and is willing to conform. She won’t be able to hide this.”
Sub-optimal brain function. A dysfunctional member of society. These were the terms that I’d carried secretly my whole life. But not Coral. My sister was perfect. If she wasn’t, why was I even doing this?
Dr. Bradley read too much into my silence. “And how are you, Sage? Are you taking your medications? Any blackouts recently?”
“I’m fine,” I lied through my teeth, staring at the charts spread across his desk. “But there has to be some kind of mistake. She’s almost eighteen. If there was a genetic anomaly, you would have caught it by now. So that means she can hide it. She can fight this system too.”
The great city of Ethica and it’s perfect bloodlines. I was seriously going to throw up.
“I’m afraid not.” He scooped up the charts and tapped the folders against the desk to straighten them. Paper trails. He was still old school, but they’d be entered in the database soon and after that, there was no escape.
“What is it?” My mind was still spinning and I focused on not ripping the papers from his hand to burn them. Think of ice water. I was disassociating, going to the place that had kept Coral and me safe for all these years, but I would figure this out.
I’d take care of her.
There wasn’t another option.
“A mutant variation of the lycanthrope sequence. It’s a miracle she’s avoided detection for this long, but from what we understand, a human parent breeding with a…” the derogatory term died on his lips and he coughed to clear his throat, “an other can cause the offspring to have latent abilities.”
This has to be a joke. I looked Dr. Bradley straight in the eyes, wondering if the dry old man was screwing with me. “Even if the abilities were latent, you would have seen something like this in her DNA at birth or any other time she’s come in for care.”
“She hasn’t come in for medical treatment that required bloodwork until now.” He shrugged like I should have seen this coming. “And your father was the attending physician for Coral’s delivery and Melinda’s subsequent death so he would have been able to falsify her documents.”
Like he did for you. Dr. Bradley didn’t say that part, but the accusation hung in the air as he put the charts in his briefcase.
Except this wasn’t anything like what my father did for me.
“How long do we have?” My vision was starting to blur and I pushed back my chair, needing to get out of there fast before I caused a scene. Later, there’d be time to process this all.
Right now, I had to get to Coral and make sure she would be safe.
“I’ll give you until tomorrow morning to get your affairs in order.” He wouldn’t meet my eyes. Now you have the decency to be ashamed? I knew what my father’s final request had been of the man and this definitely wasn’t it.
“Thank you.” The real miracle was how I was able to keep the anger out of my voice at that moment.
“Sage, wait,” he called me back as I turned to rush from the room. “I’m going to put a word in with the council and have her relocated to one of the nicer research facilities. She’ll be able to continue her education and contribute to the advancement of science. It’s really the best option for someone in her situation.”
“No need.” I smiled sweetly, still trying not to break. There was no way in hell anyone was putting my sister in one of those buildings where she’d be tested and prodded, treated like some sort of freak, and I’d never see her again. “I’ll take care of this myself like I’ve always done.”
The words were a slap across his face and I took a bitter sense of delight in watching his pale skin blanch further. Normally, I wasn’t this cold.
But normal had gone out the window a whole ten minutes ago.
“I’d hoped it wouldn’t come to this.” He dug out a keyring from his pocket and unlocked the top drawer in his desk, pulling out a worn manilla envelope. “Your father asked me to hang onto this for you in case anything should ever happen.”
Whatever words were in that package were about ten years too late, but I took it anyway. “Tomorrow morning, correct?”
“I’ll wait until the clinic opens for the day.” Dr. Bradley nodded as I turned on my heel to leave. “Good luck out there.”
The office door slammed behind me as I ran from the waiting room, pretending not to hear the relief in his parting words.