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He hurries to close his laptop and turn off the desk
lamp. I pull the door shut and lock it and then run to the
opposite end of the trailer. I push the blinds out of the
way and look out the window, but all I see is empty black
night.
Thomas is looking out the window on the other end of
the trailer. “Snowcats. Two of them.”
“Heading toward the building or away?” I ask.
“Seem to be going away.”
“Toward the fence?”
“Yeah.”
“Maybe they won’t see the snowmobile,” I say.
“Of course they will, and when they do, they’re going
to know someone’s creeping around out here. We need to
go.”
The wind is battering the trailer now. I can feel the cold
air blowing through seams in the walls and up through the
floor. Thomas is at one end of the darkness and I’m at the
other. I walk toward his voice and then get down on my
hands and knees to feel around for my jacket, wishing I
hadn’t taken the thing off in the first place.
In the darkness, I bump into Thomas, who’s also search-
ing the floor for something. I reach around for the nailer
but can’t find it. My hand touches something soft on the
floor.
“Your hat,” I say.
We stand up at the same time, both of us holding on to
his hat.
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I hear someone rattling the doorknob. Thomas exhales
in annoyance, and says, “Who can that be at this hour?”
“Maybe Oscar finally realized that it’s cold outside.”
I walk toward the trailer door.
“Don’t let him back in! Are you nuts?”
“But if they see him, they’ll come over and investigate.”
He groans. “I suppose.”
I unlock the door and it instantly swings open. Some-
one grabs the front of my coveralls and pulls me out into
the snow.
The back of my skull smacks against the frozen ground,
and I see lights popping against a dark background and
then afterimages of burned-out stars. I try to roll over, but
there’s a soldier sitting on my back, pinning my arms against
my sides with his legs. When I strain to get up again, he
backhands me across the face with his glove, which is cov-
ered with jagged bits of ice. He’s about to speak into the
radio clipped to his collar when suddenly a blur of move-
ment dislodges him.
I see a bright yellow flash and hear someone growl.
Oscar. He pummels the soldier, his fists flying so fast, so
hard, I’m sure the soldier’s face must be shredding like wet
paper. Oscar clasps his hands together and begins pound-
ing the soldier’s chest, like he’s doing ultraviolent CPR.
The soldier kicks both legs up in the air, but Oscar holds
on to him with his legs and keeps squeezing. I hear a snap.
I think it’s one of the soldier’s ribs. Oscar lets go, maybe
thinking the soldier is now hobbled, but the guy rolls to
the side and tries to reach for his weapon. Oscar grabs the
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rifle away from him and momentarily tries to figure out
how to fire it. He puts his finger on the trigger, but noth-
ing happens. The soldier manages to get a hand on the end
of the gun and pulls on it. I can see the soldier has some
kind of computer screen attached to his arm, just above his
wrist.
Oscar kicks the soldier in the face, wrenches the rifle
free, and tosses it as far as he can into the darkness, throw-
ing it like a boomerang. I hear the sound of jingling metal
coming from wherever it lands.
I look up at the trailer and see that Thomas has been
watching this, too. I need to see where that gun landed.
“Turn the lights on!”
Thomas is confused, but he does it. The lights from
inside illuminate a small patch of ground, and I now see
that the trailer is about fifteen feet from the edge of the
construction pit. Between the trailer and the pit there’s a
series of chain-link fence sections. They’re not sunk into
the ground. The posts are anchored in buckets of hardened
concrete, maybe to make the fence movable.
Now we can all see where the rifle landed. It’s hanging
by its strap from the top of one of the fence sections. The
soldier is gasping for air, but he runs toward it. Oscar stays
put, squatting in the snow, his black eyes blazing. When
the soldier gets to the fence, he tries to lift the gun up, but
he’s having trouble getting the strap free.
Oscar looks over his shoulder and smiles at me with an
expression that says, Watch this.
He sets himself up like a sprinter and takes off running
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full tilt toward the fence. The soldier has just about untan-
gled his gun when Oscar plows into his back and drives the
guy headfirst into the fence, flattening both of them to the
ground. The soldier must be unconscious, or at least dazed
by the impact, because he hardly fights as Oscar grabs him
by the front of his jacket and drags him toward the edge
of the pit.
“Oscar, no!”
It’s too late. Oscar positions the guy at the edge and rolls
him into the darkness with his foot. I run to Oscar’s side
and stare into the black mouth in the earth. All I can hear
is the moaning of the wind. There is no sound from below.
Oscar waves sweetly at the abyss. “Adios.”
I take a few steps back. I notice that Oscar found some
footwear—a pair of rubber boots. He’s laughing hysteri-
cally as he slaps me on the back and points at the pit below.
Then we hear the sound of someone talking, calling
out. Followed by a beep. The soldier’s radio had been
clipped to his collar, but it must have come loose in the
struggle.
“Come back,” a man’s voice says. “Hey, where you at,
Simmons? Answer me.”
I search in the snow, trying to find the radio. When the
guy at the other end calls out again, I find it, along with
the soldier’s pack. I shake the snow off the radio and press
the call button. I hear a blip of static, followed by a beep.
“That you? Where you at? I’ve got nothing out here
except frostbite.”
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“Go back in the trailer, Oscar. Turn all the lights out
again. Now!”
He smiles at me and says, “Si, si, mija. Whatever you
say.” He takes his time walking toward the trailer, still
laughing to himself. I press the radio button to speak as
Oscar steps into the trailer. The lights go out. Suddenly,
Thomas is at my side.
“I’m not staying inside the trailer alone with that guy.”
Again the soldier on the radio speaks. “Simmons, man,
what’s up?”
I press the button and say, “He’s dead.”
Thomas hisses at me, “Angel! What are you doing?”
He tries to take the radio, but I swat his hand away and
say, “Grab the backpack! It’s your turn to trust me now.”
Thomas snatches the pack off the ground.
“He’s dead,” I say into the radio again. “I . . . I don’t
know what happened. He fell. He fell into the construc-
tion pit.”
“You better be lying to me or I’m coming for you!”
Thomas is freaking out pretty good now, but he steps
back when I press the radio button again. “I’m sorry. It was
an accident. Really, it was.”
“Where are you?”
“Don’t hurt me,” I say. I’m trying to sound like Jori. It
seems like the kind of thing she would say and the world
would ignore. “I didn’t know. I didn’t mean to do it.”
The guy’s voice softens a little as he says, “Yeah. Okay.
I’m sure it was an accident. Just tell me where you are.”
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I motion for Thomas to follow me, and we go back
to where we put Jori. An inch of snow has covered her.
I brush it off, startled at how much she resembles a child.
“Help me move her over near the fence,” I say.
As we pick her up, her flimsy hospital gown rides up to
her waist. I whisper to her again and again, “I’m so sorry
for this.”
“Are you still there?” I hear the soldier say over the
radio after a minute.
I press the button. “Yes. I just want to go back inside.
I’m so cold.”
“I can help you with that. Tell me what’s around you.
I’ll find you.”
I prop Jori’s body up against a section of the fence that
rings the construction pit. We’re now a good fifty yards
from the trailer. I say into the radio, “I’m sitting by some
big machine. It’s orange with a big drill.”
“I think I know where you are,” he says. “I’ll be there
in a second. Do not move.”
Thomas and I quickly scurry into the shadows. A few
minutes pass. Then a shot rings out. It hits Jori in the chest,
and her body momentarily jerks up into the air.
Thomas whispers to me, “And I thought I was smart.
You’re a genius. Holey head or no.”
I don’t feel like a genius. I feel sick as I watch the soldier
walk up to Jori and give her a push with his boot. She falls
over.
He speaks into his radio. “Simmons is dead.”
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Another voice on the radio. The same one I heard ear-
lier. “Get his computer and pack and get back up here.”
“Can’t. They’re both gone. The little nut-job pushed
him into the construction pit.”
The robot-voiced soldier on the other end says, “You’re
going to have to retrieve them before we leave.”
“Understood.”
The soldier takes a last look around and heads back
toward the research building. Thomas whispers to me,
“What computer is he talking about?”
“The guy had something strapped to his arm. Right
here,” I say as I point at my forearm. “What do you think
it could be?”
Thomas’s eyes narrow. “I’m not sure, but the fact that
they want it back so badly makes me want it even more.”
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CHAPTER 17
ne hour, one scavenged rope, and many slipknots later,
OThomas is standing on the edge of the construction pit,
looking scared to death but ready to descend. I explained
to him that my experiences with freestyle climbing were
exclusively on urban terrain. Giant black pits in the earth
during a blizzard? I don’t do those.
“Just go slowly,” Thomas says. “And remember, if you
drop me, I will kill you both.”
Oscar gives his squinty-eyed smile and says, “I got
you.” Oscar seems to warm up to Thomas the crabbier he
becomes, like he finds Thomas’s annoyance amusing.
Thomas and I exchange looks of terror. Oscar is still
suffering from a case of the psycho giggles, which is worry-
ing, because each time he starts laughing, he lets go of the
rope a little. But we both realize that I need Oscar’s help. I
don’t think I can lower Thomas down on my own.
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“Here we go,” Thomas says as he positions himself and
then leans back into the pit. I feel the rope go taut as he
starts to rappel down.
Thomas had looked over the drawings in the trailer and
determined that the pit was about fifty feet deep. What
wasn’t clear was how much progress they’d made in pour-
ing the concrete for whatever this underground bunker
was going to be.
I feel the rope tacking back and forth. I look over at
Oscar, who has the rope braced against his back, his hands
gripping it on either side of his hips. He’s doing most of
the work, and really, other than the fact that he might be
a remorseless killer, he’s just the kind of person you’d want
as a spotter.
The rope goes momentarily slack and then taut, again
and again. Just as I’m getting into the rhythm of lowering
Thomas down, the rope goes limp. I wait for the pull of
his weight again, but it doesn’t come. The time seems to
stretch out. He can’t be more than halfway down.
“Thomas!” I shout, trying not to be too loud. I have
no idea who else might be around, but it’s hard to shout
quietly.
“Thomas, can you hear me?”
I’m answered by nothing but silence for a long, fright-
ening moment. Then I hear Thomas’s voice. “I landed
right on top of the guy. We’re on some kind of scaffolding.
Hold on.”
Two minutes later, he calls for us to pull him up. Oscar
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wastes no time hauling on the rope, pulling hand over
hand like a machine. We soon see the light from Thomas’s
headlamp, and a second later his head emerges from the
blackness. Oscar lets out a whoop.
Then he lets go of the rope.
He walks away with his head cocked in this weird way,
menace and glee spreading across his face as he laughs to
himself.
I still have the rope, but I’m not expecting to take the
full brunt of Thomas’s weight and I get pulled forward
off my feet. Thomas is able to get a hand onto the section
of the fence that had fallen over and hangs on. Then the
whole fence section starts to slide toward the edge of the
pit.
I push myself forward with my elbows and grab hold
of the fence even as I’m still holding the rope, but it’s not
enough to counter Thomas’s weight against the pull of
gravity. I crawl onto the fence, thinking my weight will
anchor it in place, but as Thomas pulls himself up, the
fence starts sliding down with both of us on it.
We’re going over the edge. There’s nothing I can do to
stop it. The fence shoots forward, gaining speed, and I’m
frozen to it, staring ahead into the void.
I think two things at the same time: I’m going to die and
Do something.
I don’t know how long this moment lasts, but even as
I feel myself tipping forward, about to plunge into the pit,
somehow I have time to wonder if I should hold on to the
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fence or let go of it. I grab the lattice with my fingers just
as the fence jerks to a stop.
The fence sticks out like a diving board from the edge
of the pit. It teeters slowly, and I hold my breath until it
levels out again. The snow whips around my face, and a
gust of wind unbalances me. I tip forward, my fingers fro-
zen to the metal. I try to inch back slowly, but as I shift my
weight, the fence dips again, sinking even farther this time.
Suddenly it snaps back.
“It’s all right,” Thomas says. “I’ve got you.”
Somehow he must have scrambled up the fence as it was
falling, like he was going up a down escalator.
“Angel. You need to come back. Come on. Just a little
at a time.”
The metal is bowing underneath my body, and my head
and shoulders are hanging in midair. I can’t make myself
move, though. Not until I hear Thomas’s voice again.
“I’ve got you. Come on back, Angel.”
I crawl backward slowly, shaking more and more the
closer I get to frozen ground. Finally, I feel the toes of my
boots against the dirt. Two arms circle me, and Thomas
pulls me the rest of the way.
The moment I’m clear, the fence plummets down into
the darkness below, landing a few seconds later with a jin-
gling crash. We both sit there, panting.
“We’re okay. We’re safe now.”
I look over at Oscar, who is doing some kind of shadow-
boxing thing. He jogs around raising his hands in victory
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