The Breakers Code (14 page)

Read The Breakers Code Online

Authors: Conner Kressley

BOOK: The Breakers Code
13.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

     “I want Casper and I want to leave!” I huffed, but the thin lady just smiled and left, closing the door behind her.

     I was determined not to eat from the platter she had left but, as the minutes passed, it became more and more difficult to pass up. I couldn’t remember the last time I had eaten anything, and it turned out my stomach couldn’t either.

     A half an hour after the thin woman left it, the smell of the food became too tempting. By the time Mr. Echo came to see me, I was finishing a fistful of bacon.

     “Making yourself at home, I see. That’s good.” He was more dashing than he had been the night before; dressed in a suit. His beard even seemed to be better tended, though I’m not sure how much of that was accurate. My eyes had been playing tricks on me lately.

     I pushed the platter away and folded my arms. He circled the room and sat on a chair across from me.

     “I do hope the color is to your liking,” he motioned to my gown. “I’m afraid we had to do away with your clothes. They were- Well, they were covered in blood.”

     “It wasn’t mine,” I said. “I don’t, I’m not hurt.”

     “I know. I ordered a physical on you and your friend. Aside from a few bumps and bruises, you’re perfectly fine.”

     I looked down at the gown, suddenly very aware that someone had to remove my clothes in order to put it on.

     “I didn’t perform the physical myself, nor did I change you. We have people better suited for that,” he answered, as though he was reading my face. “It does beg the question though, how did the blood get there, Cresta?”

     “How do you know my name?” I tensed up.

     “It’s on your driver’s license,” he explained. “Plus, Casper was screaming it in our general area.”

     It sounded strange to hear our names coming from his mouth, like he was trespassing on what it meant to be us.

     I reached for my locket, wanting to twist it up between my fingers, before I remembered that it, like everything else, was gone. “What is this place? It’s not a juvie.”

     “It isn’t,” he conceded, drumming his fingers along the nearby dresser as he had his desk last night. “It’s-It’s a school of sorts.”

     “What does that mean?” I folded my arms again.

     He leaned forward. “I told you last night that I knew what you were. That’s because I’m one too. We’re the same, you and I.”

     “And what is that?” He was starting to sound like one of those crazy evangelicals from TV, but I was sorta trapped, so I might as well listen to him.

     “You’re evolved ,Cresta. “

     “Evolved?” I repeated.

     “Your mind,” he reached toward my head, but when I flinched away, settled his fingers on his own temples. “There are people in this world; there have always been people in this world, who are special. We are genetically superior; bred so that our minds and bodies are more advanced than the general population. Because of our genetics, we’re able to do certain things. We can make people see things, make people forget things, move objects with little more than a thought.”

     Suddenly, my arms started to lift from the bed. Before I knew it, and without my consent, they stretched out straight in front of me. The smile on Mr. Echo’s face told me he was the culprit.

     “Stop that!” I said, trying my best not to let my voice shake.

     As suddenly as they had lifted, my arms fell.

     “My apologies.”

     “So, you’ve got superpowers?” I asked.

     “No,” he answered. “We’ve  got superpowers; you, me, and, with the exception of your red haired friend in the next room, everyone in Weathersby.”

     I relaxed a little. Even with all the crazy he was dropping on me, it was good to know Casper was in the next room.

     “Though we are all capable of things like that,” he pointed to my arms.”Each of us have special abilities, things we’re more naturally inclined towards. Some of us are illusionists. They’re the ones that make sure you see or don’t see certain things. There are empaths, who control the feelings of those around them. Some of us can reach into your head and pull out a memory, or plant one there. There are even those who can read everything about you with a single touch.”

     I turned my hand over. Looking at my palm, I remembered the way Owen looked when he touched me. And then, what he said in Mrs. Goolsby’s basement.

     “The lines,” I muttered.

     Mr. Echo’s eyes narrowed. “Cresta, tell me what happened to get you here?”

     “I’m not one of you,” I said, still looking at my palm.

     “You are,” he answered. “That’s why you could see through the illusions.”

     His lip didn’t move as he spoke and his voice echoed as though it was inside of my head.

     :That’s why you can hear me now:

 

     “Stop it!” I clutched at my temples. “So what if I am one of you? What, am I just supposed to move in here and sit around your school all day?”

     He laughed. “Is that what you think we do? Cresta, people like us have a higher calling. Have you ever heard of the Free Masons?”

     I nodded. Casper had always been a fan of conspiracy theories. In addition to never-ending talks about the Mayans, Shakespeare being a woman, and Kennedy’s real assassin (FBI agents who were afraid he was going to give away the secrets of Area 51), Casper also told me about the Free Masons. From what I remembered about the parts I wasn’t able to block out, the Free Masons were a secret society dating back to the founding fathers who were really powerful and who guided the world in whatever direction suited them.

     “Well, we’re not the power hungry manipulators people would tell you we are.”

     Great, so I listened to Casper for nothing.

 

     “You’re a Free Mason?” I asked.

     “In a way,” he stood now, and started pacing. “For hundreds of years, evolved people like us have been saving the world. How, you ask?”

     I hadn’t actually, but go on.

 

     “The most powerful of our kind have the ability to glimpse into the future. Seers, we call them. Using the intel these seers give us, we’re able to create a roadmap of the future. And, with that roadmap, we’re able to make sure the world doesn’t devolve into disaster, as it’s so prone to do. We avert disasters, whether they be natural or manmade. We are the last line of defense against the horrors of fate, the only thing standing between the world you know and constant and utter chaos. We break away from the horrible things that could be. We are the Breakers.”

     He seemed really proud of himself just then.

     “So you do manipulate things?” I asked.

     Mr. Echo stammered. “I-I don’t think you’re listening. What we do is save the world, over and over again. There was a missile crisis. We just saved it last week.”

     “Right. Whatever,” I stood. I had had quite enough, thank you. Super evolved or not, this was getting old, and it wasn’t getting me any closer to Morgan Montgomery.

     “Cresta, you’re one of us.” He grabbed my arm, as though he thought I was going to run again.

     “Why, because I can see through your stupid illusions?” I jerked my hand away. “You ever think maybe you’re just not as good as you think you are?” I straightened the front of my lavender gown. “Besides, if everything you’ve said is true, wouldn’t I have powers too?”

     The wide smile that appeared on his face made me uneasy.

     “I have a theory about that.” He dipped to the floor and came up with a silver square. It wasn’t just any silver square though. It was mine; the suitcase Mom gave me before the house blew up. I thought I had lost in the ruckus. Casper must have picked it up when he drug me out of there.

     “That’s mine!” I reached for it.

     “I know,” he said, and flung it on the bed before I could grab it. Maybe it was the way the suitcase hit or maybe it was his weird evolved person- Breaker powers, either way the suitcase popped open as it hit the bed. Inside was a fresh pair of clothes (something I desperately needed), a stacked cube of hundred dollar bills, and at least two dozen inhalers, and a phone.

     This was Mom’s going away present. In case we ever had to leave, God forbid in case we ever got separated, like we were now, she wanted to make sure I’d be okay.

     “You’re asthmatic, I presume?” Mr. Echo said. He didn’t make a grab for anything. He didn’t even look at the money.

     “You guys did the physical. You tell me,” I said bitterly.

     “That’s just it. While your results showed effects of the symptoms of asthma. It didn’t show the actual condition. Cresta, you are one of us. You have the genetic markers. I’ve seen them.”

     Now he did go for the case, but it wasn’t the money he was after. He picked up one of the inhalers and studied it.

     “We did a chemical analysis on your medication. It doesn’t treat asthma. In fact, it causes your body to mimic the symptoms of asthma.”

     “What? Why?” That didn’t make any sense.

     “Because it also stymies a third of your neurological pathways. It negates the evolved nature of your mind, strips you of who you are. Whoever is giving you this medicine, whoever gave you this suitcase, has been drugging you.”

     “No!” I yelled. “That’s not true! I don’t believe you.” Mom gave me that suitcase, that medicine. Mom always gave me my medicine. She wouldn’t drug me. She wouldn’t.

     “Believe it or not Cresta. That’s your prerogative. But it’s been cleansed from your system, and I bet you haven’t felt this good in years; free of the closed throat and shallow breathing. Soon, your mind will open up, and you’ll understand what I’m talking about. You’ll start to notice little things at first, but then your abilities will awaken, and the whole world will change. I can help you through that if you let me. I can teach you how to do these things. I think that’s why Ash sent you to me.”

     Suddenly, I found myself sitting on the bed, going through the inhalers, money, and clothes; the last gifts my mother would ever give me. “I wasn’t sent to you. I was sent to Morgan Montgomery. But he-he’s gone.”

     I felt tears, as hopeless as they were useless, well up in my eyes. Mr. Echo reached into his jacket pocket. I thought he was going to offer me a tissue, but what I saw instead was a photograph.

     “I want to show you something,” he said, and handed it to me.

     It was an old photo with the kind of faded color that only existed before everything went digital. A boy, about Casper’s age, with shaggy brown hair, was posing for the camera, obviously trying way too hard to be cool. He wore a leather jacket and his hair was slicked back. He had his arm slung over a girl’s shoulder. She was close to my age, with dark brown ringlets and angular features that looked familiar. She almost looked like a younger version of-

     No. It’s not. I couldn’t be.

     “That was me,” Mr. Echo pointed to the too cool boy. “When Breakers are called out into the field, they’re given new names, new identities. We’re called to leave our old lives behind. I’m Echo now, but there, in that life, I was called Morgan Montgomery. And the girl beside me,”

     He was going to say it.

     “She was Ash.”

     Of course. The girl in that picture; Ash, she was the one who sent me here. She was my mother.

     “Oh God,” I said before I could stop myself. That was my mom; young, with a different name, in a different world, but it was my mom nonetheless.

     “You said Ash sent you here Cresta, but that’s impossible. Ash, this girl, she died years ago.”

     “She didn’t,” I said flatly, running my thumb over her faded image. “She died yesterday, and she was my mom.”

     He seemed shocked as he sat beside me. Both of us were silent for a while, both of us looking at the picture. A few times, Mr. Echo turned and I thought he was going to ask me something. I’m glad he didn’t. I wasn’t sure where I would start or how much about my mother, about my life, was even true.

     Instead, it was me who spoke first. Holding the picture tightly, like it was a lifeline to something I never knew existed but was desperate to explore, I asked, “Did you know her well?”

     He scoffed, and the answer he gave shocked me so much that I almost fell off the bed.

     “I should. She was my wife.”

 

 

 

Chapter 8

 

G in Chains

 

 

     She was my wife.

 

     I sat there, rolling those words around in my head. She was his wife, and not just his wife, but his dead wife.

     “She was a Breaker?” I asked. My mouth was dry and the word felt strange on my tongue.

     “She was a hell of a Breaker,” he said in a tone that made me think he was going to smile, though he didn’t. He looked down at the picture again, still in my hands.

     My mother had a whole life before me, and not in the way all parents did. She was a different person, with different friends, a husband I never knew about, and secret superpowers.

Other books

Out of My Depth by Barr, Emily
Private 8 - Revelation by Private 8 Revelation
Apron Strings by Mary Morony
Monsieur le Commandant by Romain Slocombe
Bound by C.K. Bryant
The Quantro Story by Chris Scott Wilson
Calico Palace by Gwen Bristow