Authors: Hayley Stone
“You think I can't do that?”
“I think your vision is shortsighted and a little naïve, to be perfectly honest.”
I huff but let her continue.
“You believe you can save everyone, and you take it personally when you lose someone. Lieutenant Moore, for instance. But I remember the shores of Normandy. World War II,” she clarifies, as if I don't remember. As if I haven't been studying up on the major wars and revolutions of the twentieth and twenty-first century in my spare time to fill in the knowledge I've forgotten. Ulrich pushes military texts on me whenever he gets the chance. I normally return the favor by sneaking erotica into his room when he's not there. I have no idea whether he reads it or not, but I've never received a complaint. Maybe he's too embarrassed to admit to finding the books or, better yet, to enjoying them.
“What's your point?” I walk over and toss the tissues in a nearby trash receptacle.
“My point, Commander, is this. The past is a steep bank of corpses. If you're too afraid to see them, too afraid to acknowledge this simple fact, then you'll never be able to reach victory. Those who can't climb the bank die upon it. Even some who are perfectly equipped for the struggle perish along the way.” I believe she's referring to herself when she makes this last statement. I wonder how much time she has left, if the cancer treatments are working or not. “Life isn't fair, Commander. You may have been given a second chance, but that's rare. Miraculous, even. It's time you stop living in a fantasy and wake to the reality of our situation.”
“And what, in your esteemed opinion, is that reality?”
Renee leans down with a tissue to rub off the last bit of vomit from her shoe. “If something doesn't change, and soon, every last human in the Northern hemisphere will be dead before winter. And no amount of feel-good speeches is going to stop it.”
Knowing I'd have more luck solving Euclidean equations than falling asleep, I go in search of Samuel instead, hoping he is indeed back. While I'm eager to see my friend after almost two months of separation, I can't pretend that's the only reason. Cordier might be on to something. If anyone can shed some light on my doppelgänger mystery, it's Samuel. Given that he usually spends every waking hour on the biology level, I figure that's the best place to start my hunt.
Ulrich tags along, my big grumpy shadow, grumbling in German about the late hour. I let him continue thinking I don't understand what he's sayingâand for the most part, I still don't, but I can usually hazard a guess. I've even picked up a few phrases in our time together. For example, if I ever need to ask for seconds or complain about there being too many people around, I'm covered.
“Hey, now,” I say, interrupting Ulrich's moody tirade, “I thought you were my huckleberry.”
“Not after midnight.”
“I wasn't aware huckleberries got to choose their hours.”
“We are unionizing,” he replies absently, glancing back at the hall behind us.
I laugh. It feels good after a long, tense day. “You must be tired. You're not normally so snarky. Anyway, I promise I won't be long. Just a quick chat with Samuel and then you're relieved of duty.”
“He is probably sleeping,” Ulrich points out. “Like a normal person.”
“Then I'll wake him up.”
As loath as I am to use an elevator to reach Biology, I don't have the energy for several flights of stairs. Someone else heading to the upper levels holds the door open for Ulrich and me, but I can't help lingering in front of the threshold, cycling through all the horrible ways I could die inside that tiny metal car. I don't realize I'm frozen, struck by mental catastrophe again, until the man clears his throat.
“Going up, Commander?” he asks me, eying Ulrich a little nervously.
“Yeah.” I force a grateful smile. “Sorry. Dragging a little tonight.”
“Not a problem. We've all been there.”
I liberate one foot from the floor, then the other, pushing myself forward like I'm escaping a tar pit instead of merely trudging into an elevator. Already I'm rethinking my decision not to return to Dormitory, flop into bed, and cocoon myself in a nice blanket burrito. Nothing bad has ever happened to someone wrapped in a blanket burrito. True story. Without Camus talking and thrashing, I might even sleep through the whole night. Then again, without the reassuring weight of Camus's body on the other side of the bed, I probably won't be able to slumber at all. Even if I somehow manage to fall asleep, I'm afraid of the dreams I might have. The lonely darkness I'll eventually wake to.
“Level?” the man asks.
My brain's slow to process the question. “Oh. Biology. Thanks.”
“You got it.” He punches the button for level three and takes a tiny step away from Ulrich, who is projecting his bad attitude like a radiation cloud. “Burning the midnight oil, huh?”
“Something like that.”
Throughout the brief journey, the elevator lights flicker a couple times, the car shuddering as it ascends. Leftover kinks from the attack, most likely. I'm not sure who I should talk to about getting it fixed, but I think someone should probably look into it. Each time the car jolts, I reach a hand toward the guardrail, as if that thin tube of metal will save me should the elevator crash.
“I don't care for elevators, either,” our companion says sympathetically. He's a short Indian man, midthirties, with some out-of-control facial hair curling downâor up?âboth sides of his face, but his eyes are bright and friendly. “If it helps, there are numerous safety devices installed to prevent an elevator from plummeting to the ground. Fun fact: if the pistons fail, we're much more likely to shoot straight through the ceiling. No worries about a freefall.”
“You don't say.”
I inch closer to the wall, watching the electronic panel tick off floors as an automated voice announces the same in the background. Finally, the car begins to slow.
Come on, come onâ¦
“Have a good night, Commander, andâ¦uh, friend,” the odd man says, right before the doors open. I step out ahead of Ulrich, turning around long enough to give the man in the car a quick salute. You meet the strangest people on elevators. Must be the enclosed space, with no way to escape. Irony loves that kind of stuff.
A wall of hot air greets us, raising a thin coat of sweat on both my forehead and Ulrich's by the time we've walked maybe forty feet.
We're in what amounts to McKinley's greenhouse, where most of the base's food is produced. When we first moved in, and our population was smaller, we relied largely on what we could scavenge from neighboring cities, but in the years since, we've become entirely self-sufficient, taking advantage of renewable energy technology from before the war. I thought we were doing pretty well for ourselves until the Chinese surveyed our agricultural programs and pointed out half a dozen ways to improve our output and reduce the risk of deadly mutations killing our crops. Further proof of how much we need this coalition.
Ulrich and I navigate the waist-high planters side by side, with room to spare. Each planter runs the length of the room, hundreds of feet long. Inside them, a variety of vegetables are growing, their vines breaking through dark, moist soil to lean against metal stakes. Along the far wall, there are even fruit trees, a small orchard resurrected from seedlings. I visit this part of the level so rarely that I'm still completely enamored with the color in the room. Above all else, the sight of oranges and bright red apples makes me smile. It's a reminder of life before, as well as the promise of life continuing. As I pass by a tomato plant, I brush my fingers across its feathery petals.
Something always survives.
Exiting the greenhouse rooms, Ulrich proposes we take a shortcut through Water Treatment. We've had this debate before; he claims it's faster than navigating all the back halls, especially now that there are more people around. I'm too tired to argue with him, so I reroute.
A dozen large basins occupy the enormous water treatment room, each taller than an aboveground pool, separated by narrow platforms for maintenance workers. Pipes of various sizes climb the walls and wrap around the width of the room like snakes on the inside of a tomb, delivering waste and retrieving fresh water as necessary. I breathe in deeply, tasting clean moisture on my lips. The slightly chemical smell reminds me of pirates. No. A ride with piratesâan amusement park attraction. Something like that. Oddly enough, this is the one place in all McKinley that doesn't feel like a swamp. The air conditioning units must be running constantly here to keep the water chilled and prevent the growth of harmful bacteria.
Praise be to the AC gods.
There's something comforting about the sound of the water, too, every basin warbling to the tune of overworked filters. Samuel once compared this area to the Jedi Temple's Room of a Thousand Fountains, but I've seen the films, and I don't remember any fountains.
“Commander Long!” One of the security officers flags me down and jogs over. The necessity of having clean, drinkable water is enough to warrant 24/7 security for this area of the base. Even with everything that's going on, I'm glad to see the council hasn't neglected its other duties, such as reassigning shifts to those still alive.
At first, I think the officer's going to give me trouble, but then he smiles, a little breathlessly.
Someone's out of shape
. Lefevre's warning surfaces in my brain. We've become too comfortable here. “Twice in one night. To what do I owe the pleasure?”
Twice?
An uneasy feeling snakes into the pit of my stomach. “Sorry. You're saying you saw me earlier, hereâin Water Treatment?”
The officer's substantial forehead wrinkles, his smile turning confused. “Is this some kind of test?” He glances at Ulrich who is too busy watching the perimeter of the room, the entrances and exits, to pay him any mind. Something has him on edge, even if he won't admit it. “Have I done something wrong?”
“No. No, you're not in any trouble.” I feign a headache, pinching the bridge of my nose. “It's just been a long day. Refresh my memory. When was I here last?”
“A few hours ago, shortly before the vigil. You asked whether it would be possible to introduce a fluoride agent into the water supply.”
“But we've already fluoridated the water. Didn't we do that a month and a half ago?”
“Right. I thought it was odd. Then you asked to see how the process worked, how we make sure the dosage is correct so we don't accidentally poison the water instead of cleaning it. Are youâ¦feeling all right, Commander?”
“Just a little rattled by the attack.” At his concerned expression, I offer a smile. In reality, I feel like I've just swallowed a horned toad. “I'm fine. Really.” I press my finger against the shiv in my pocket so hard I know I'm running the risk of drawing blood, but the pain is a nice distraction, and it's better than the alternativeâhaving a psychogenic attack in front of one of my subordinates. That storyâthe great Commander Long coming unhingedâwould run like a violent, electric shock through McKinley.
Never let them see you sweat. Or black out.
“While I have you, officer, one more question: you haven't seen Commander Forsyth tonight, by any chance?”
He shakes his head. “Sorry.”
Oh, well. It was worth a shot.
“Do me a favor⦔
“Larry,” he supplies eagerly.
“Larry,” I say. “I want increased security for the treatment room, whether that means new ID scanners or more guards. Whatever it takes. Also, have the engineers run diagnostics on the waterâcheck the pH levels, that sort of thing. Just to make sure there are no problems.”
He frowns. “Problems? Like what?”
“I don't know, Larry,” I reply, a little more tartly than I mean to. “That's why I want the tests. We're still assessing the damage to the base's infrastructure, including piping and power. Better to be on the safe side, right?” I start to walk away, but another thought strikes me, spins me back around. “One more thing: halt all fluoridation for the time being. I don't want anything in that water but water.”
Larry scratches the back of his neck. “I don't have the authority toâ”
“Then pass it along to your superiors. If they have complaints, tell them they can take it up with me, personally.”
I nod to Ulrich, who falls into step beside me. “Well?” he says.
“There's something rotten in the state of Dakota.”
“Denmark,” Ulrich corrects with a hint of a smile.
“Denmark. Dakota. Same difference,” I say, covering. “Besides, Denmark's a country. That doesn't even make sense. Whatever. Let's just hurry and find Samuel and Camus. Then we can worry about what the hell else is going on inside this base.”
The Chemistry department is located at the end of Biology's Research and Development wing, marked by a shift from concrete floors to blue linoleum. A painstakingly detailed mural stretches the length of the hallway, crosses a portion of the linoleum, and finishes on the other wall, depicting a complicated atomic structure that looks like it took some time to paint (and even longer to understand). Beneath the mural are the words
Dimidium facti qui coepit habet
in an elegant script.
Sounds profound. Too bad I don't know Latin. I am versed in a little Klingon, oddly enough, but only because I thought it would be funny to have Samuel teach me how to ask where the bathroom is. He also taught me the phrase
I cannot speak Klingon
in Klingon, which seems self-defeating, but what do I know about aliens? I have enough problems with robots; no need to add extraterrestrials into the mix.
Unless the aliens were on our side, fighting
against
the machinesâ¦
It's easier to let my mind wander to these ridiculous scenarios than let my thoughts fester and my doubts cannibalize me. Camus missing. Samuel still absent. Blackouts. And a woman parading around the base with my face and my handprints and my voice. Only two explanations make sense.
One: another clone is running around McKinley. Somehow. It survived the demise of Brooks facility, was recruited by the machines, and made its way back here. How, and to what end? I don't know. Nothing good.
Or.
I've been dancing around the alternative, stamping down the possibility like glowing embers I could put out with my bare feet. But I ignored the first rule. The most important rule when it comes to crisis management.
Where there's smokeâ¦
Fire.
And usually I'm somehow involved, too.
“Hey, Ulrich,” I say, falling back alongside him. He's not moving at his usual, relentless speed, and I'd outpaced him. “Quick question. Yes or no.”
There are so many things I want to ask him, but I have to tread carefully with this line of questioning. Even Ulrich can't know what I've come to suspectâthat the original Rhona might have come out of that snowy hell alive, fought her way back to consciousness only to discover herself surrounded by machines and corpses. Abandoned. Maybe she would have wished she died. But the machinesâ¦
The machines would never release such a prize.
This is the scenario that haunts me. Mostly because if that Rhona showed up today, I have no way of knowing where people's loyalties would be, on my side or hers.
The blood of the covenant is thicker than the water of the womb.
I remember hearing that once. How thick is the water of a cloning tank, I wonder?
“Do you think I'm capable of what everyone's accused me of?” I ask, not referring to myself per se. “Letting the machines inside the base, planting a bomb⦔
Hurting Camus. Conspiring to poison our own water supply.
I don't volunteer that last one. It's still only a suspicion at this point.