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Extras u-4

Page 18

by Скотт Вестерфельд


  He shrugged. "Nanos. Maybe flash-bombs?"

  "Definitely flash-bombs," Tally said with a shiver. "Shay and I had a bad experience with nanos once."

  "Bombs away, then, Tally-wa," Fausto said. He swung a pack from his shoulder and began to rummage through it.

  "Pardon me, Tally -wa?" Aya said, hoping she had the correct title. "My friends have also seen the strange people."

  "You've seen them?" Tally turned to the others. "All three of you?"

  Hiro, Ren, and Frizz all bowed apologetically, and Tally let out a groan.

  "We might be less obvious if there's four of them, Tally-wa," Shay said. "And they'll be safer with us than if they stay here and get kidnapped."

  "But we've only got three boards!" Tally said. "That's no good for seven riders."

  "This hole in the wall can make big things," Hiro said, his English coming out a little shaky.

  "Boards with lifting fans?" Fausto asked. "That work outside the city, off the grid?"

  Hiro frowned. "Maybe not."

  "Great," Tally said. "We'll have to call David into town, which screws up the whole plan. And you know how much he hates cities."

  "Pardon me, Tally-sama," Ren spoke up in halting English. "Hiro has skill with a hoverball rig. If he stays close we can tow him."

  Tally hesitated for a moment, glanced at Shay, then nodded. "Okay. That should work."

  Hiro began to unstrap Frizz from the hoverball rig and put it on himself, complaining about the cracked shin guards. Ren told the hole in the wall to fabricate some crash bracelets, and reminded everyone to turn their locators off. The Cutters began to slap smart plastic on their faces and hands, hiding the lace of flash tattoos and their cruel pretty features.

  Aya wondered why they needed ugly disguises out in the wild.

  "Excuse me, Tally-wa, but where are we going?"

  The Cutters traded glances, and the question hung in the air for a moment.

  "We don't know yet," Tally finally said. "But we'll find out soon."

  Honorary Cutter

  Their hoverboards were waiting on the roof.

  The three Cutters went ahead, their sneak-suited forms sliding across the darkened expanse like graceful ripples in the air. Aya barely saw the attack unfold—their arms spun almost invisibly, the throwing motions like a sudden breeze stirring dust and leaves across the roof.

  It was all so silent and insubstantial until the explosions began.

  A spray of bright white flashes filled the night sky, sending jittering shadows across the roof. A cascade of detonations pounded her ears.

  "Come on!" Frizz said, grabbing her hand to pull her forward.

  A dozen steps away, half-blinded by the flashes, she felt a riding surface under her feet. Someone tall and muscular pressed against her, one arm around her waist.

  "Hold on!" Tally shouted, and the board rose hard and fast, the scream of lifting fans filling the air.

  Tally's body was wiry and hard, like a gymnast full of steel cables. "Didn't we tell you to keep your eyes closed?"

  "Sorry." Aya squeezed Tally's waist tightly, blinking away spots. It reminded her of all the times Moggle had blinded her Moggle! Her hovercam was out there somewhere, probably battered and confused by the flash-bombs.

  "Excuse me, Tally-wa. But can Moggle come too?"

  "Who?"

  "My hovercam."

  "Your wait. You own a hovercam?"

  Aya blinked again, her vision slowly returning. "Almost everyone here does. How else would we put stuff on our feeds?"

  "You mean you all have your own feed channels, too?" Tally laughed. "This city's insane!"

  Aya looked over her shoulder. The cams, blinded by the barrage of flash-bombs, were milling around in confusion. The ultrafast Cutter boards had slipped past them in seconds.

  "Please? Moggle doesn't like being left alone."

  "No way," Tally shouted against the wind. "Have you not noticed we're trying to hide here?"

  "Of course but this would be for later. For history."

  "Forget it. History's not my favorite subject either. Especially when it's about me."

  Aya looked up at Tally's disguised face, and for a dizzy-making moment she was reminded of Lai. But the comparison was brain-missing. Tally was the most famous person in the world, and Lai was a deliberate extra—or at least she had been, before Aya had kicked her into unwanted fame.

  "Tally-wa? Why are you all disguised as uglies?"

  "In case one of those hovercams gets a shot. Can't let anyone know we're in town. Speaking of which " Tally gestured, and her sneak suit began to change, taking on the texture and pattern of a dorm uniform.

  Aya nodded with comprehension, but this was still frustrating. Here she was, riding a hoverboard with Tally Youngblood, and no one could see it. She wasn't even wearing a spy-cam!

  She realized how few real pictures of Tally she'd seen. Even in history books all the images were paintings or manga, as if Tally was some pre-Rusty from before the days of cams.

  But extras wanted connections with their heroes. That was why Nana Love was always Nanachan

  , never Nana-sensei, no matter how famous she became. Famous people owed the world images of themselves.

  A few shots for history's sake wouldn't hurt anything.

  As they zoomed through the new construction site, lifting fans screaming and Rusty iron shooting past, Aya booted her eyescreen. She opened up a tracking signal, whispering a short ping to Moggle in Japanese "Follow us as jar as you can."

  Whatever happened next was going to be very kickable.

  They made their way toward the city's edge, screaming past all pursuit.

  The predawn air was bitingly cold, but Tally hardly seemed to notice. Aya turned up the heating in her Ranger coverall, thankful that she'd ditched the slime-spattered party dress.

  The Cutter boards were amazingly powerful, even carrying two riders each. Of course they'd slow down once they left the grid and had to tow Hiro.

  And once out of the city, Moggle wouldn't be able to follow at all.

  "Tally-wa?" she ventured. "We could take the mag-lev line out of town. Plenty of metal."

  Tally shook her head. "Too much traffic out there. Tons of wardens are headed out to the mountain, not to mention the Global Concord Committee on its way."

  "But they'd be happy to let you through, right? You're Tally Youngblood! You must have stacks of merits."

  "Merits?"

  "Oh. In my city, merits are " Aya's mind spun for the right English. "Respect from authority Like fame, but for doing community things. Because you saved everyone from the Prettytime, my city would give you any assistance you needed."

  "I'm not interested in their help."

  Aya paused, wondering if the Nameless One's groupie had been right after all. "Are you worried that my city built this weapon?"

  Tally shrugged. "I wouldn't say worried.

  In fact, that would make things simpler. Governments have been taken down before, after all." She turned around and gave Aya a sharp-toothed smile. "By me."

  Dawn began to break, and the wild stretched out before them, black and endless. The factory lights below grew sparser, and Aya's eyescreen began to lose the feeds.

  Not that they'd been kicking anything new: Where was Aya Fuse headed off to now? Were all these dramatic disappearances nothing but publicity stunts? Was the mass driver the beginning of a new dark age of warfare?

  Nobody had realized yet that Tally Youngblood was in town. Maybe Aya's first night of fame hadn't exactly worked out as she'd planned, but at least she had a big follow-up for the City Killer story.

  She smiled. Rescued from aliens by Tally Youngblood!

  As they neared the edge of the grid, the formation drew closer, their magnetics interweaving. Aya felt the shudder of Hiro's rig connecting with the boards.

  "Bye, Moggle," Aya whispered in Japanese.

  "Get home safe."

  "You ready?" Tally asked. "Things might get a li
ttle nervous-making now."

  "Don't worry about me. This can't be any worse than mag-lev surfing."

  "It might be." Tally looked over her shoulder, eyes narrowing. "When Shay and I watched your feed story and saw all those tricks you pulled—going undercover, mag-lev surfing, flying up the mass driver—we decided you were a pretty tough girl."

  Aya bowed a little, feeling herself blushing. "Really?"

  "Really. We figured you wouldn't mind having one more adventure, Aya-la, seeing as how saving the world is so high on your list of priorities."

  Aya looked into Tally's eyes, trying to read her expression. She was pretty sure that

  — la was a good title. Tally had called her friend Shay-la at least once.

  "An adventure?"

  "That's why we're here, to take you on an adventure."

  Aya nodded, but she was still unsure. "But you came to protect me from the " She didn't know the English word for freaks.

  "The strange people. Right?"

  "Well, partly." Tally shrugged. "We also want to get to the bottom of all this, and find our friend who disappeared. So we figured a tough girl like you would want to help with that, Aya-la. As a sort of honorary Cutter."

  Aya felt a smile spreading across her face, and she had to remind herself not to bow. "Of course.

  I would be honored."

  "Thought you'd say that. I'm just sorry your friends have to come along."

  "They must be honored too, Tally-wa."

  "Don't be so sure. You know that tracking signal you've been sending to your hovercam?"

  "Um, my what?"

  "Your hovercam, Aya-la the one that's been conveniently following us." Tally's toothy smile appeared again. "We've been boosting your signal just a little. Not so much that your local wardens will bug us, but enough."

  Aya swallowed. "Enough for what?"

  Tally turned to face the front of the board. "For that."

  Aya stared ahead into the distance. She couldn't see anything but the blackness of the wild, and the glow of dawn beginning to encircle the horizon.

  "Let me know when you can see them," Tally said. "I want this to look realistic."

  "Realistic?" Aya murmured, and a few moments later her eyes caught a glimmering cluster among the fading stars. She squinted, clearing the last bit of city interface from her eyescreen, and realized what they were.

  The running lights of three hovercars.

  "Are those friends of yours, Tally-wa?"

  "I've never met them. But I think you have."

  Aya blinked, her excitement moving in a new and stomach-churning direction. The hovercars were closing fast, the scream of their lifting fans echoing across the wild the inhumans had found her again.

  And Tally Youngblood had let it happen.

  The Plan

  "Everyone!" Tally shouted. "Head back toward the city!"

  The board whipped around beneath them, and Aya squeezed tight, remembering that her crash bracelets were useless out here in the wild.

  "What about my brother?" she cried.

  "I got him," Tally said, angling closer to Hiro. She shouted, "Better hang on, just to be safe!"

  Tally climbed above Hire's outstretched arms, and seconds later Aya saw his fingers grasping the board's sides.

  The board shot forward, back toward the city. Even with the magnetic connection, Hire's knuckles turned white as they accelerated.

  Aya stared down at the black forest rushing past. This whole towing thing had sounded tricky enough with them all going slowly.

  "What if Hiro falls out here?" she cried in Tally's ear. "We're all helpless! You were just using us as " Her English faltered.

  "Bait is the word," Tally yelled. "I'll explain everything later, Aya-la. This is the part where you have to trust me!"

  Aya shut her eyes, reminding herself who this was. She was riding with Tally Youngblood—the most famous person in the world—not some crazy-brained Sly Girl.

  However panic-making this looked, everything was going to be okay.

  She dared a glance over her shoulder. The three hovercars were gaining easily on the overloaded boards. As they grew nearer, the lifter fans began to shake the air.

  Tally began to rock the board, and Aya squeezed tighter. "What are you doing!"

  "They're trying to push us around. We have to make it look like it's working!"

  "But why?" Aya cried, trying to keep her balance without shifting her feet. One wrong step, and she'd squash Hiro's fingers!

  "Have you not been listening?" Tally yelled. "We don't want to give ourselves away!"

  Aya frowned. What was the point of looking helpless? Whatever trap the Cutters had planned, wasn't now the time to spring it?

  The edge of the city was in sight—maybe that was where they'd make their move. Once they were over the grid, Hiro could fly again, and their crash bracelets would work.

  She looked around. Frizz and Fausto were only ten meters away, Frizz's manga eyes wider than ever. Fausto was swaying their board back and forth, an expression of wild delight on his plastic ugly face. Ren and Shay were pulling ahead, riding low and straight.

  A car pulled level with Aya and Tally. The side door slid open, revealing two freaks staring at her, lifter rigs strapped on.

  "They're waiting until we get back over the grid," Tally yelled. "That means they don't want to kill us."

  "Wonderful." Aya swallowed, thinking of all the worse things than death the freaks might have planned.

  One of the hovercars swept in closer, and Aya felt a familiar shudder building in the air.

  "Shock wave!" she shouted, just as the turbulence hit.

  Her ears popped, the wind battering her eyes shut. Then the board hit a pocket of low pressure and dropped. Her feet lifted from the riding surface, and Aya clutched Tally's waist as hard as she could.

  Then the board popped back up, Aya's ankle twisting as her feet slammed down against a bump on the riding surface.

  Him'$ fingers Aya heard his cry as he fell away, the city's edge still in the distance.

  "Tally!" she screamed.

  "Don't worry." Tally's body twisted in Aya's grip, bringing them around in a heart-stopping turn.

  For a moment there was nothing below Aya but trees and brush—she was almost upside down, the howling lifter fans pushing her down past Hiro's tumbling form.

  Aya wanted to scream, but every ounce of her strength went into squeezing Tally's waist.

  They fell past Hiro, his panicked cries Dopplering by, then the board twisted again, sweeping up beneath them. Tally reached out and casually grabbed his arm, swinging him onto the board.

  His face was pale.

  "Sorry to cut that so close, Hiro," Tally said, glancing up at the hovercars. "Didn't want to make it look too easy."

  The three of them staggered on the unsteady board, arms wrapped around each other. The lifting fans screeched under Hiro's added weight.

  Aya's nose caught the scent of burning metal. "Are we overheating?"

  "Yeah," Tally said. "The timing's perfect."

  They shot across the city's edge just as the fans seized up with metallic shriek. The board shuddered as the magnetics took over.

  But they were still descending "We're too heavy!" Hiro yelled. "Let me go! I can fly now!"

  "Not yet." Tally still had an arm wrapped around him.

  Above them six inhumans had jumped out of the cars. Two pursued each of the Cutters' boards, their needle fingers glistening in the dawn light like icicles.

  "This is when you get them, right?" Aya asked. She hoped Moggle was close enough to capture the Cutters bursting out of their disguises and surprising the inhumans.

  "Not yet," Tally said.

  In the distance Aya saw Frizz and Fausto spinning out, their board losing control as two inhumans closed in on them.

  Aya looked down. The ground was still rushing up too fast for her liking. Tally guided them toward a narrow alley between two factories, where one of the inhumans
waited, all four arms extended.

  "Let me go!" Hiro shouted.

  Tally nodded. "Okay, in three seconds two " On one she pushed him from the board. Hiro leaped forward, arms outstretched—but something was wrong.

  He was spinning wildly out of control, his limbs whirling like a top. An inhuman swept up beside his flailing form and stabbed him with a needle.

  "Hiro!"

  Aya screamed. "Tally! Do something!"

  "Don't worry, Aya-la. It's all going according to plan."

  Tally twisted the board away from the inhuman. But another waited at the alley's other end. They were headed straight toward him.

  "Tally! Climb!"

  "Quit waving your arms, Aya-la, or this could get messy."

  "It's already messy!"

  They shot straight into the outspread arms of the inhuman, and Aya felt a needle jab in her side.

  Slivers of cold began to spread through her, like tendrils wrapping around her lungs and heart.

  "Do something," she whispered, still expecting Tally's smart-plastic disguise to burst away and reveal her fearsome Cutter face.

  Then she saw it clutched in Tally's hand—one of Hiro's shoulder pads, its straps undone. Tally had pulled it off on purpose. She dropped it as the hoverboard spun toward the ground.

  "Just hang on for a few more seconds, Aya-la. Don't want to bump your head." Tally slumped down toward the riding surface, her eyes fluttering closed. But she sounded totally alert as she hissed, "And wherever you wake up, don't call me Tally. We're just your ugly friends, got that?"

  "But why ?"

  "Trust me, Aya-la. Sometimes it's a messy business, saving the world."

  Aya's brain was spinning from the needle jab, losing its grip on consciousness, but slowly she grasped what the plan had been all along: a way for the disguised Cutters to be captured.

  Aya and the others had been nothing but bait And Tally Youngblood—architect of the mind-rain, the most famous person in the world—was nothing but a truth-slanting Slime Queen.

  Part III

  LEAVING HOME

  Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without merit, and lost without deserving.

 

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