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Chimera m-4

Page 11

by Kelly Meding


  He climbed out. Thatcher and I glanced at each other before we followed. We met him by the bumper of the Sport. The air here was cooler and had a nose-tingling sharpness to it that made me want to sneeze. I squeezed the bridge of my nose and that only made my eyes water.

  “Twenty years ago, this was one of the last thriving mining towns in this part of the state. Clean energy regulations had shut down half a dozen other mines, so those families moved here looking for work. And then this mine was shut down and no one had jobs. Some folks moved away, but others were sixth-generation miners. They didn’t want to leave, not even when other businesses closed and the chains refused to put a store in any closer than forty miles away.

  “State and local governments were so busy with the Meta War they didn’t have time for saving these small towns. They still don’t. They want everyone in cities where they can control what they eat, where they work, and how they live their lives. It’s why people like Bethany and me do what we do.”

  A small crowd had gathered in Main Street, watching us from a distance. I didn’t sense any hostility from them, despite the fact that we were strangers (and I was probably the first blue person they’d ever seen). More than anything, the mix of faces seemed curious—not to mention happy to see Landon. They gradually inched forward, like a nervous crowd unsure how to welcome home a returning hero because he’d brought back an unexpected companion. Or two.

  “Everything here is shared,” Landon continued. “Labor, clothing, supplies, food, it’s all communal. They take turns working in the garden. Some folks hunt and fish, others gather edibles from the mountains. No one hoards. No one steals.”

  “Who enforces that?” Thatcher asked.

  “There is a five-person council that changes every six months. Names are drawn from a lottery of everyone over the age of twenty-five. There’s an official town charter that establishes certain rules, but the council doles out punishments when necessary.”

  Something cold raked down my spine. “Punishments?” I asked.

  Landon nodded. “Rule breakers aren’t given a slap on the wrist and community service, Flex. The only way a community like this can survive is if everyone follows the rules. Punishments are rare because they are effective deterrents.”

  The crowd was still out of earshot, but they continued moving closer and growing in number.

  “So what happens if someone steals a loaf of bread?”

  “The last time that happened was about a year ago.”

  “And?”

  He shrugged one shoulder. “They broke both of her hands.”

  My insides twisted up tight, and I balled my own hands into fists to keep them from shaking. “Are you serious?”

  “Completely serious. What do you think they should have done? Fine her? No one here has any money. And no one else has tried to steal a single scrap of food since.”

  “Hell, why didn’t they just stone her in the town square?”

  Landon looked at me like I was nuts, and I kind of wanted to punch him in the mouth. Actually, I’d wanted to punch him for hours now and the urge continued to grow. “How old was she?”

  “Fifteen.”

  I pressed the heels of my hands into my eyes as I was assaulted by mental images of a teenage girl having her hands broken by people in authority, people in a position to help or harm as they saw fit. I wanted to cry and scream and stamp my feet in protest of the horrible thing done to her. Over a fucking loaf of bread! This is insane!

  Were all small, cut-off communities like this? Were they all led by people willing to harm children in order to protect what they saw as the status quo? Ever since my rescue by the Rangers, I’d lived in cities and sprawling suburban areas. My foster parents had lived in a lovely community with access to so many wonderful people, and it had never felt insulated. Not like this little mining town, and not like the compound I’d grown up in.

  Someone’s hand closed around the back of my neck, a gentle and warm touch. I didn’t look, but I knew it was Thatcher, and I didn’t pull away.

  “Landon?”

  The stranger’s voice made my head snap up. Thatcher’s hand fell away, but he stayed close. A tall, thin woman with graying hair approached us. Her sharp face was chiseled by hardship and lined by worry, but she carried herself with the confidence of royalty. A man shadowed her, shorter but just as thin, his advanced age impossible to guess. They both eyeballed me and Thatcher like we’d just cut wind and forgot to excuse ourselves.

  Landon shook both of their hands. “This is Renee Duvall and Derek Thatcher,” he said. Then to us, “Darlene Woods and Artie Cavendish, two of the town’s council members.”

  We all exchanged polite handshakes.

  “I’ve heard of you,” Darlene said to me. “You were one of those Ranger children.”

  “That’s right,” I replied, not sure if my notoriety was a plus or a minus.

  “We heard about what your people did during the earthquake relief. Well done.”

  I stumbled on my words, taken aback by the praise. “I . . . thank you.”

  “Landon,” Artie said, his voice as creased and aged as his face, “does this have something to do with the man your Bethany came in with last night?”

  Last night. Ethan was here somewhere. I glanced around, as if he were standing right behind me waiting to be noticed.

  “It does,” Landon replied.

  “And they’re both Meta?”

  I bit back a snide remark. My Meta status might be obvious to the world, but Thatcher could pass for perfectly normal.

  “Yes, they are,” Landon said.

  “Then they are welcome here,” Artie said. He grinned at us and showed off a mouthful of small, yellowed teeth. “Landon and Bethany have been a blessing to this community, and any friends of theirs are friends of ours.”

  “Thank you,” Thatcher said. The tightness in his voice told me he was thinking about just how we’d been dragged into this little community.

  “So the man Bethany came in with,” I said to Artie. “Do you know where he is?”

  “I’ll take you to him,” Landon said. I didn’t miss the furious look he flashed my way.

  “Will you both be staying for the evening meal?” Darlene asked. “If so, you may dine with my family. I’ll request guest rations.”

  Guest rations.

  “I’m not sure how long we’ll be staying,” I replied. “But thank you for the offer.”

  “It’s an open offer, Ms. Duvall.”

  Thatcher and I followed Landon across the quiet park, to the far side (west, guessing from the position of the sun) where a handful of barnlike buildings stood. The doors were pulled shut, so I hadn’t a clue what was stored inside. Past the barns we picked up the road again. It twisted up into the trees and the mountainside, and a weathered road sign said, in simple black letters, MINE AHEAD.

  Between the barns and the road, however, was a wooden platform in the center of an open patch of grass. The platform was raised about five feet off the ground, reminding me a bit of hanging gallows in an old western movie. This one didn’t have a gallows, but it did have a single thick post of wood right in the center, about three feet high, with a steel ring on top like something you would attach a chain to. We passed close enough to see dark stains on the unfinished wood and the center post. A set of wooden stairs led up to the platform.

  “What is this?” I stopped walking and stared, aware of an encroaching sense of horror.

  Landon turned long enough to give the platform a dismissive glance. “It’s where the council performs punishments.”

  “What?”

  “In public?” Thatcher asked.

  “Of course in public,” Landon said. “How is it a deterrent if it’s done in private?”

  Ice water surged in my veins, and my vision tunneled in on the platform. I saw it as clearly as if it were happening all over again: a jeering crowd spewing profanities and urging the leaders on; a girl helpless to defend herself, crying for her p
arents to save her; the stone-cold faces of her torturers, uncaring of the agony they were inflicting on a child.

  I felt the sun on my face. I felt the wood at my back and ropes against my naked skin. Smoke rose up and choked me, leached into my nose and mouth and skin. Flames licked higher, closer, searing heat eager to taste my newly blue flesh. Flesh that ached to bend and twist, to help me escape, only they’d tied me too tight, bound me too well. Fear and despair and hatred held me captive as securely as the priest’s ropes. As securely as the revulsion in my parents’ eyes as they watched from the crowd.

  “Burn the demon out of her! Free her from its evil grasp!”

  I was shaking and I couldn’t stop. I couldn’t stop the barrage of memories, either. Memories of events I’d shoved down and blocked out a long time ago, things I’d only ever shared with three people in my entire life: my foster parents and William Hill. William found out the broad strokes when we were still kids. His father had been in the Ranger Unit that rescued me that day, and William and I became reluctant friends. We’d talked about it again as adults, not long before he died in a gas explosion.

  Another fucking fire immolating another piece of my life.

  “We’re your family now, Renee,” William had said almost twenty years ago. “The Rangers are all you need.”

  “I missed you, Blue,” were the first words he’d said when we met again at Rangers HQ nine months ago.

  “Renee?”

  I think it was Thatcher’s voice, coming from far away, on the other side of my descent into the pain of my past. My eyes stung and my cheeks were wet, and on the tail end of my fear came humiliation. I didn’t cry in front of others. I did it in private—always.

  Someone touched my arm. I jerked away and kept going. I didn’t mean to run, not really, and I had no idea where I was going. I bolted across the road, half blind, and into the thick forest of trees and underbrush and fallen debris. No crash of pursuit. No shouts for me to stop. I kept going, strangely freed by the burn in my legs and lungs, urged onward by spiking adrenaline.

  Away from that damned platform, I tried to put the ghosts of my past back into that dark, protected place in my mind. But this time they wouldn’t let me close them off completely. My brain echoed with the phantom taunts and my nose stayed full of the odor of charred wood and smoke. I ran until I stumbled, crashing to my hands and knees in a pile of wet leaves and dirt.

  Gasping for breath turned into choking sobs. I hugged my knees to my chest and cried in the privacy of the mountains, with only holly trees and a few squirrels to see me. I didn’t have to be quiet, didn’t have to pretend it hurt less than it did. I cried for myself, for the girl who stole the bread, and for everyone this community council had publicly punished in the name of law and order. I hated them for their cruelty, and I hated myself for my weakness.

  Eventually my sobs quieted. I lay in the leaves, curled tight in a ball, head throbbing, exhausted. I blew my nose and wiped it on some semi-dry maple leaves (you use what you’ve got). I had to go back at some point, but staying put seemed so much easier. It didn’t require getting up. I was also pretty sure that I was lost.

  “Today just keeps getting better and better,” I said to a nearby holly tree.

  The only way I was getting out of here was by getting up off my emotional ass. Easier said than done, though. Getting out of here at all required going back to town (which I had no idea how to find). I didn’t hate the town. Part of me admired their tenacity for sticking it out when the government had pretty much abandoned them. They kept their community alive despite all odds, even if they had to steal to feed themselves. I didn’t fault them for wanting their children not to starve.

  I did fault them for that platform. Punishment for a crime was one thing. Public punishment and humiliation, especially brought against a child, was wrong. I couldn’t forgive that.

  I managed to sit up, only slightly dizzy. I had a few small cuts on my hands I hadn’t noticed before, probably from running blindly into tree branches on my psychotic race into the woods. Those marks made me aware of a slight sting above my left eye, and I found another oozing cut there.

  “Fabulous.”

  Wood snapped in the distance, from the direction I was pretty sure I’d come. The sound repeated a few times, moving closer. Had Landon chased after me? Or sent Thatcher to bring me back? I stood up and waited, scanning the thick underbrush for any sign of movement.

  “Renee!”

  My ears perked up. “Here! I’m over here!”

  The rustle and crash increased, growing steadily louder, until Ethan burst through the brush. He barreled right at me and swept me up into a tight hug. I threw my arms around his neck, never so glad to see him in my life. And it wasn’t until my cheek collided with cold metal that I realized he wasn’t exactly as he’d been yesterday.

  “Are you okay?” I asked.

  He held me at arm’s length and stared at me like I was an idiot. Ethan had been fitted with a collar not unlike the security collars used on the Manhattan prisoners. And it looked exactly like the collar that had been used on Andrew last month. “I’m fine, Stretch. Are you all right?”

  “Better now.”

  “That’s not an answer. Thatcher said you freaked out and ran into the woods. That isn’t like you.” He touched my cheek in such a protective, brotherly way that I wanted to break down again. This was my family now. Nothing in the past mattered.

  “I’m just happy to see you,” I said. “We’ve been climbing the walls since yesterday.”

  “Me, too, trust me.” A brief flash of fear crossed his face. “How’s Aaron really?”

  “Pissed and worried, like I said before, but physically fine. We found him pretty quickly, tied up like a Christmas turkey.”

  “Stopping for a body in the road was a stupid idea, huh? When Aaron collapsed . . .”

  “He’s perfectly fine, Ethan, I swear. And you’re sure you’re okay? What about that collar?”

  He tugged at the metal cinched tight around his neck. “It’s annoying, but it doesn’t hurt. Bethany says it has a built-in shocking mechanism, and if it’s anything like the collars I saw the Recombinant clones use on Andrew and Freddy, I’m not about to test her word.”

  “So she’s kept you here with the collar.”

  “Basically. Says if I go farther than a half mile from the remote, it will automatically shock me into unconsciousness. How the hell did she even get a collar like this?”

  Uncle.

  “Did Bethany tell you anything about the man who raised her and Landon?” I asked.

  “No.” He scowled. “She didn’t say much beyond a few attempts to flirt with me. Why?”

  I summed up Landon’s comments about Uncle. “She couldn’t have gotten that collar on her own, and we know the clones got their collars from their creators. What if Uncle is tied to the Recombinant projects? What if training these kids is somehow part of a larger plan?”

  The impact of what I suggested seemed to hit Ethan all at once, because he looked ill. “Then I think we’re in the middle of a bigger plot than any of us imagined.”

  “But it doesn’t make sense. Landon and Bethany were raised as thieves, sure, but they use their skills to help people. It’s not like they’re robbing banks and keeping the money.”

  “I understand that, believe me. But they’re still committing crimes. Worse, they’re Metas committing crimes, and that’s all the general public will see. Landon and Bethany have motivations, but all this will do is keep driving that wedge between Metas and regular people. And something tells me this damned Uncle or Overseer or whoever knows that.”

  “He’s using them,” I said. “This Uncle told Landon that his father abandoned him to go off and murder children in the name of the Banes.”

  Ethan pulled a face. “Derek’s not like that.”

  “I know, but Landon didn’t. He believed it, and maybe he still does. I bet you Uncle told Bethany something similar about her mother.”

>   “Do you think Uncle sought out the children of known Banes in order to manipulate their emotions and make them loyal to him?”

  “It makes sense. Another fucking fail-safe, just in case everyone’s powers returned. It gives them a ready-made army of superpowered young adults with massive grudges against their absentee parents.”

  “How massive, do you think?”

  “Well, before we left New Jersey, Landon said he’d had every intention of shooting Thatcher on the spot.”

  “Crap.”

  “Exactly. He obviously didn’t do it, but that anger and resentment doesn’t just go away. And Landon is powerful. We need him on our side, especially if we’re going to find out if Uncle has any other kids out there doing his dirty work.”

  “He won’t help us if we turn them in for robbing those warehouses.”

  “Right.”

  Ethan heaved a mighty sigh, then ran his fingers through his already mussed red hair. “Why can’t our cases ever be simple? It’s always people possessing other people’s bodies, or fighting clones of our dead parents.”

  “Simple is boring, Windy.”

  “I would love a little boring. Bring on the boring.”

  I laughed at the eager way he said that, grateful he’d managed to make me smile. “Thank you for coming after me.”

  “Technically, I think you came after me.” His amusement disappeared, and he gave me a stern look. “Seriously, though, Renee, are you sure you’re all right? You know I can keep a secret if there’s anything you want to talk about.”

  “I know that.” But the middle of the woods wasn’t the place to unload my personal pain on him, even if I wanted him to know it. “Rain check?”

  “Okay.”

  Ethan seemed to have his sense of direction finely tuned, so I let him lead us back to town. “Does Teresa know where you are?” he asked after a few minutes of walking.

  “Not exactly. She knows we met Landon in New Jersey, but Landon blindfolded us before he brought us here. I’m not even sure what state we’re in.”

 

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