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you what you don’t want to hear. They fill out paperwork about
your status and your future. And then that’s it. No matter what
you do, no matter how hard you try, you can’t ever be the same
again.
I feel like I’m falling. I feel that tickle in my stomach as I plunge
down into a shaft of darkness, and as I fall, I pull the emptiness
around me right into my heart. I want to be one with this nothing-
ness. The empty black nothingness.
But suddenly there’s an abrupt shift inside my mind, and in an
instant, this bad memory is a flag snapping in a too-strong wind.
It tears loose and is carried off.
Now I’m climbing, hand over hand. Higher and higher. My
feet slipping on metal bars that are not meant to be used as steps.
I’m climbing to get closer to something, or farther away—I don’t
even know. And wrapped up in this pain, as inseparable from me
as a parasite is from its host, is the name Erskine Claymore.
I’m on the bathroom floor again, panting.
I make myself stand up, and then I spit into the sink and
rinse my mouth, because I taste stomach acid at the back of
my throat like I’m going to throw up.
The only thing I can think to do is move. To run. Just
like Thomas said. If I move fast enough, I can leave these
bad dreams behind and they’ll fall away and evaporate.
I rush into the hallway, dashing one way, then another,
like a frantic bird that’s accidentally flown inside of a build-
ing. I run with no sense of purpose or direction. I just
want to get more lost. The hallways are full of turns, full
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of choices that I refuse to make, and it wouldn’t matter if I
did. Because they all lead me to the same place. To pain, to
the dull emptiness of grief.
I run and run and run, until I notice that beneath my
feet the bare concrete floor has given way to soft carpeting.
I stop and try to pull air back into my burning lungs.
Up ahead I think I see a light. I lower my glow stick,
and there it is. A small green circle. I head toward it and
come to a fancy door made of striped wood with a smoky
glass center. The room beyond is dark, but now I see that
the tiny green light is from a magnetic card reader. I seem
to have come to the edge of where power and outage
meet.
I wonder what this place could be. I pull my passcard
out, debating whether I should use it. What if it gives my
location away? I don’t care. I’m too curious.
I zip the card through the reader and pull the door open.
The room on the other side looks like a hotel lobby,
complete with concierge desk. There’s a water feature—
the kind that trickles and drips and is supposed to make
soothing noises like a mountain brook. In the center of
the room is a coffee table made of tangerine-colored glass,
two clear plastic armchairs, and a huge sofa with square,
white leather cushions and chrome legs. Looks expensive
and extremely uncomfortable.
I walk in, sit down, and put my hands on my knees.
Obviously it’s a waiting room.
It’s the kind of place where you sit alone, chewing on a
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piece of your hair and bouncing your leg nervously. Before
you hear adults say that they did all they could but it was
too late. Before you pick out a casket. Before you’re told
that you’ll be moving to a new home the next day, so
gather everything you have into a single bag—everything,
including all the happiness you’ve ever known—because
they’re going to shepherd you into a bleak new future and
you can’t refuse to go.
Before all that, you wait in a room like this. Except it’s
a lot less nice.
I stand up and straighten my back. A calm anger
strengthens me, sharpens me, as I look around.
It’s all so strange. This is newly built. I don’t under-
stand why the government canceled this project just to start
decorating this place like a posh resort. It makes no sense.
My eyes sweep back and forth, trying to see if there’s
anything worth taking. I see a crystal candy dish on an end
table marked with an E. C. It’s filled with candy-coated
chocolate mints. Without thinking, I grab one and toss it
into the air. Before the candy lands in my mouth, a mem-
ory lands first.
“Catch it!” my mother yells.
I don’t.
“Again!” she says, tossing another seed to me.
I miss.
“Ay, Angel, you’re terrible at this!” she says, laughing. “I’m
almost out of pepitas!”
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“I can do it!” I pout. “One more time.”
We walk and she tosses another pepita. It bounces off the end
of my nose. We are now emerging from the subway onto the street.
It’s our mysterious yearly trek to the Upper West Side. I have
never asked her why we come here before, but today I do.
She takes me by the hand and says, “I like this place.”
“We have parks, too,” I say, defending our neighborhood,
which is not this nice or this quiet. And there are too many men
without jobs hanging around, and they usually start drinking by
noon.
“I know, but this park brings me happy memories,” she says as
she swings my hand high above my head.
We find a bench and sit to eat the lunch my mother has brought:
beef empanadas, plain white rice, and a Coke. We always sit on
this bench, directly across from a big mansion overlooking Riverside
Park. My feet do not touch the ground. I swing my legs like I’m
kicking the air.
“I wish I was rich. I wish I had a house like that,” I say.
“Do you?”
“Yes.”
“You know, I used to work for the man who lives in that big
house.”
“Really? What was he like? Are rich people mean? That’s
what Yolanda Cruz told me. They’re all mean and selfish.”
“No, they’re not all mean and selfish. The man I worked for
was very nice. He was the best man I ever knew.”
“What happened to him?” I ask.
My mother does not reply.
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“Mamá?”
She looks up to the uppermost window, and I think I see some-
one looking down at us. But only for a moment.
“My friends say things about who my father is,” I mumble.
She sighs and waves her hand. “They don’t know anything,
Angel. Just remember that you are special, and someone is always
watching over you.”
I press the heels of my hands to my eyes and groan. It’s so
frustrating! To be so close to remembering and still not be
able to see my mother’s face, just a cloud of white. I need to
remember things that will help me figure out who’s trying
to kill me and why, and this memory has given me noth-
ing useful.
I look around the room again. I pick up one of the pil-
lows. It’s burgundy velvet, corded on the edges with gold
thread. I push the nap of the fabric back and forth. My fin-
gers leave streaks. This pillow alone must have cost a small
fortune. I tuck it under my arm. I’ll bring it to Thomas.
Maybe it’ll help him rest easier.
I continue searching the room, looking for anything
else that could help him, and as I round the side of the tall
concierge desk I see something even better. A laptop. I fold
it up, snatch the power cord coiled next to it, and hang it
around my neck like a scarf.
I’ve lingered long enough. I need to get going. I turn
around and stop in my tracks. I haven’t entered this waiting
area through the main entrance. I’ve come the back way.
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I face a set of large glass doors with the letters E. C. on it.
And now I know what the initials stand for.
Of course.
Erskine Claymore.
I’ve seen these doors before. From the other side. This
is South Wing.
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CHAPTER 21
may be smeared with blood and mud, but I’m hoping
I that the soldiers still see me as a girl, because only a
girl would take such a long time in the bathroom. I don’t
want to have to explain too much about where I’ve been
or what I’ve been doing. I doubt these strange, barefoot
guys would get it.
After a few wrong turns I find my way back. As I
approach the rec lounge door, I hear an agonized scream.
It’s Thomas. I burst back into the lounge and see Sylvester
with his knees on Thomas’s chest. I’m about to pull him
off when I realize that he’s doing it to keep Thomas from
writhing around while Elmer works on the leg wound. I
rush up to them and wish I hadn’t when I see the extent
of Thomas’s injury. His lower leg looks like the muscle has
been filleted off the bone.
I turn my head and nearly drop the laptop. I watch as
Elmer wraps the leg from the knee down. He returns to his
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medical kit and produces a syringe and pops Thomas in the
thigh. I pray that whatever Elmer’s delusions are, they still
allow for proper dosing of pain meds.
When I kneel next to Thomas, he clutches at me and his
eyes open. He’s focusing on somewhere far away, a place
he wishes he could go to get away from this pain. I keep
staring at him, wishing I could take the agony he’s expe-
riencing and pull it into myself. At the very least, I want
to let him know I’m there with him, through every single
second.
After a few minutes, I feel his grip relax, and he closes
his eyes. His face becomes less ashen. I look gratefully
toward Elmer.
“That morphine shot should last him a few hours,” he
says.
“Thanks. He seems more comfortable.”
Elmer must have taken Thomas’s hat off at some point.
I slide the pillow I brought back with me under his head
and notice something I hadn’t before: the roots of his hair.
Beneath the black dye he’s a redhead.
“I brought you a very expensive, fluffy velvet pillow,”
I say.
“And a computer,” Thomas says. I put the laptop on
the floor next to him. He reaches over and pets it. “Nice
computer.”
Elmer points to Oscar, who I now see has his shoulder
bandaged. “I think the bullet passed through. Obviously,
not his first gunshot wound. He must have seen a lot of
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action. Do you know which province he was stationed
in?”
Province? I’m not sure what he’s talking about.
Elmer motions toward Thomas. “His leg is pretty bad.
He’ll need surgery soon or it’ll have to come off.”
I pull him away so Thomas won’t hear me. “Come off?
What do you mean, come off?”
Elmer says unapologetically, “I’m a medic, not a doctor.
I’ve done what I can.”
“Help me sit up,” Thomas says to our turned backs.
“No,” Elmer and I say simultaneously.
“Seriously. I need to type.”
Thomas rolls onto his stomach, trying to keep his
injured leg still. He pushes the computer screen open and
reaches into his pocket for his ugly glasses. The left lens is
cracked, but he puts them on anyway. I realize I still have
the power cord around my neck. I also realize it’s useless
because there is no working outlet. When Thomas presses
the power button, the screen lights up, and I’m flooded
with relief. If there’s anything useful in this computer, I
know Thomas will find it.
I crouch down next to Thomas as he works. Sam is star-
ing at the computer, his eyes thin slits. He’s confused by us.
And suspicious. I don’t have any hairs on the back of my
neck, but if I did, they’d be standing up right now.
After a few minutes of typing Thomas says, “I’ve got
good news, bad news, and everything in between.”
“Let’s hear it all,” I say.
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“First of all, this computer is swank. Like, even better
than 8-Bit’s computer. It’s also chock-full of tasty infor-
mation. They seem to have a completely separate, encased
mainframe for just this area. I’m sure 8-Bit didn’t know
about it.”
I glance at the soldiers and then back at Thomas, who
notices something is wrong. I give a slight shake of my
head: Don’t ask right now.
“Go on,” I say, lowering my voice.
Thomas lowers his as well. “I can get into their system
easily enough. It’ll take me maybe thirty minutes to bypass
their security. Maybe an hour. I’m not really at my best at
the moment.”
I wince. “And the bad news?”
“This battery has about fifteen minutes of juice left,
tops.”
He closes the machine up.
“It’s okay. I can take it back to where I found it.”
“You don’t need to take the whole thing. It’s got a
removable nuclear battery. Not exactly commercially
available. This might be a prototype.” He pops the battery
out of the back of the computer and attaches the cord to
it. “You found a place where the power hadn’t been cut?”
“Yeah,” I say, taking the battery from him. “I found this
weird concierge waiting area thing. Thomas, this place is
South—”
I snap my mouth shut and look up. Sam is looming over
me.
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“This place is what?” Sam asks.
I see his grip on the ax handle tighten and realize much
too late that we have a new problem.
“Whoa. What’s up?” Thomas asks. His forehead crum-
ples as he looks back and forth between me and Sam.
How stupid I’ve been. I go to the “latrine” and return
with a laptop computer? They can’t make sense of it. Part
of what’s keeping these men here is their belief that they
can’t leave. They’re prisoners of their own minds. Maybe
I’ve been living that way, too.
I take a deep breath and stand up to face Sam and his ax.
I may not have all the answers about my past yet, but I
know that being timid, weak, indecisive—that’s not who
I used to be. And I need that girl back again. Right here
and right now.
Sam is glaring at me. “Our captors could return at any
moment. Unless you already know that . . . .”
Suddenly Thomas catches on to the danger we’re in.
“Hold on. Check that hostility just a second. Let me show
you something.”
He reaches into the inner pocket of his jacket. Sam
raises the ax slightly.
Thomas pulls out the tablet we retrieved from the dead
soldier in the construction pit. I’d forgotten all about it. He
must have tucked it into his jacket like a father penguin
sheltering its egg when Oscar got homicidal with the back-
hoe. He hands the device to Sam.
Sam tips it back and forth in the light. “What is this?”
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Jerry looks over Sam’s shoulder, trying to see what he’s
holding. “How were you able to smuggle this in? They
stripped us of everything.”
“Yeah. Even our dang tighty-whities,” Sylvester says.
“They don’t know we’re here,” Thomas says. “Nobody
does.”
Sylvester lets out a whoop and elbows Sam. “I told you
they’d send someone for us!”
But Sam is having none of it. He shakes his head and
looks at me, unconvinced. “You think they’d send a girl to
rescue us? Really?”
Sylvester’s face dims as he looks at me anew.
“I guess it worked then,” Thomas says as he nods toward
me.
“What worked?” Sylvester asks.
“Special ops is getting trickier and trickier these days,
eh? Who would suspect her?”
Sylvester’s face lights up at this answer. “Yeah. Abso-
lutely. No one would.”
I point at the tablet. “We stole this. We’re still trying to
figure out how it works, but see these red dots? This shows
us where the, uh, enemy combatants are.”
Sam clears his throat and looks down at the screen. I
watch as he follows the red dots swarming all over. I can’t
read his expression at all. Finally he points at the tablet
and says, “They’ve concentrated their forces here and here.
That’s bad for them, good for us. One well-timed ambush
and they’re wiped out.”
I pick up the backpack and hold it out to him. “We also
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