Authors: Michelle Gagnon
Tags: #Romance, #Science Fiction, #Young Adult, #Thriller, #Mystery
Peter fought through the confusion. Who the hell was this guy? Where had he come from? He seemed to be helping them, but no one else knew they were here, not even Cody.
Obstinately he stayed put. He’d already abandoned Noa once. If she was in there, he was going after her.
Smoke poured through the open door. Shouts inside, the sound of someone running.
Suddenly Noa emerged, breaking free of the black smoke. The guy grabbed her elbow and dragged her toward the pier.
It took Peter a second to react—just enough time for Cole to clear the door. He was coughing hard, an arm wrapped around his mouth. The gun dangled from his hand.
Quickly Peter checked back over his shoulder. The guy and Noa were only halfway to the boat. They’d never make it.
He bent double and charged, crashing his head squarely into Cole’s gut. He heard the sound of metal on concrete. Somewhere his brain processed that he’d managed to knock the gun free, and at least for the moment Cole was unarmed. Peter felt a surge of hope. He lashed out with every ounce of pent-up rage from the past few days. The way his parents had turned their backs on him. Amanda’s betrayal. All the horrible things that had been done to Noa. Aside from some occasional wrestling matches with his brother, Peter hadn’t been in a real fight since the second grade. He pummeled Cole as hard as he could, driving his knuckles into what felt like a solid rock wall.
The hope faded quickly. Suddenly he was on the ground with Cole straddling him. “Who taught you to fight, kid?” he asked, wiping a stream of blood from his lip with the back of his hand. “Not your buddy. He put up more of a fight.”
“My buddy?” Peter was startled. What the hell was Cole talking about? “Who are you—”
Cole had drawn his fist back. Peter didn’t even have time to flinch before it connected with his jaw. He realized why they compared it to getting hit with a hammer, because that’s exactly what it felt like. Cole punched him again, and again. Each time, a different piece of Peter was jarred loose. A tooth. Part of his eye socket. Systematically, like it was a job he’d clocked in for, Cole kept beating him. Peter felt himself fading. The air seemed to be growing lighter around them. He wondered if this was what it was like to die.
“Hands in the air!” a woman’s voice screamed.
The words echoed strangely. Peter was groggy, unable to focus. His head felt like it was swelling up like a balloon.
One last blow to his chin, so hard his teeth clacked together. The voice again, yelling, “Federal agents! Hands in the air now!”
The sound of people running. Peter squinted, trying to see. The weight on his chest suddenly released. He heard Cole protesting. Another voice, authoritative, ordering, “Get to that boat!”
Rough hands dragged him to his feet. Peter’s head lolled forward. No matter how hard he tried, he couldn’t lift it.
“Take this one inside,” the same voice said. Peter let them carry him, his toes bumping over the doorsill as he was dragged into the building.
“We need light in here!”
A slew of orders being barked, the sound of general chaos. Peter let himself drift off for a bit. He wasn’t dead, which was a start. He wondered if Noa had gotten away. He hoped so. Peter realized that her plan had worked. At the thought, he choked out something approaching a laugh. The cavalry had come after all. A little late, but they were here.
“What’s so funny?” a female voice demanded.
“Nothing.” Peter raised his head and strained to see through the slits narrowing his vision. They’d brought in some sort of special lantern that cast long, triangular-shaped shadows everywhere. In its light, he could make out an older woman in jeans, a turtleneck, and a navy Windbreaker. She was frowning at him. “It’s all going to be okay now.”
“Love the confidence,” the woman said drily. “Especially under the—”
“Ruiz, you need to see what we found over here.”
The woman turned abruptly and followed another guy across the room. They had on matching Windbreakers, navy blue with
FBI
emblazoned in bright yellow letters across the back. They stopped in front of the walk-in freezer to examine the contents of the cooler. Even though their voices were low, he could detect a shift in the atmosphere of the room.
“There’s a chopped-up kid in there,” Peter called out. The words slurred together. He tried to enunciate as he continued, “More outside, in the other cooler. And on the boat.”
“What happened here?” The woman was back. Odd, Peter hadn’t even seen her cross the room. There were two of her now, too.
He smiled through throbbing lips, trying to set her at ease. “I’ll tell you everything. But first, I need to lie down. Just for a second.”
The room shifted, sliding away from him. This time, Peter let it.
Noa huddled against the back of the boat, trying to stay as far from the coolers and crab pots as possible. It was hard, though. The storm had churned the sea into a nasty, roiling froth. They were cruising up six-foot-high waves, then smacking down forcefully on the other side. Everything on deck, including her, kept shooting three feet up in the air before landing hard. Noa tried to take the shock of the impact in her knees, staying crouched as if poised to jump, but it didn’t help much. She was exhausted. And worse yet, really, really cold again.
Zeke kept glancing back to check on her. Her own personal guardian angel, though he certainly didn’t look like one. He was tall, maybe six-two or six-three, her age or a bit older. Skinny, as if he never got enough to eat. Dark hair, skin, and eyes—maybe Latino, but it was hard to say for sure.
Zeke was good at the helm, though; he must have had some experience driving boats. He was underdressed for the weather in jeans, a dark flannel shirt, and black sneakers, yet the cold didn’t seem to bother him.
She, on the other hand, couldn’t stop shivering. Her teeth were chattering so hard it made her jaw ache. Freezing salt spray pelted her cheeks until it felt like she was being encased in ice.
“Not much farther!” he called back, the wind snatching the tail end of the sentence.
Noa tried to nod but couldn’t. She kept her shoulders hunched and let herself be shot up and released by the boat, shot up and released.
They’d very nearly gotten caught. She’d tried to go back for Peter, knowing as soon as he tackled Cole that it wouldn’t end well. But Zeke wouldn’t let her. He dragged her to the boat, yelling that the feds were right behind him; they had to
go go go
…
He was right. As they pulled away from the dock, the whole place was swarmed by people in dark Windbreakers yelling orders. Noa watched them overtake Peter and Cole, then head for the pier. Zeke gunned the boat’s engine and they leaped out into the waves so sharply she nearly hurtled overboard.
By the time the agents reached the edge of the dock, the boat was fifty feet out into the water. The large waves nearly upset it, but Zeke managed to keep the hull pointed forward, righting it each time.
“Where are we going?” she called out, but Zeke didn’t answer.
Noa was worried. In a storm like this, the coast guard would be busy, but probably willing to make a boat carrying potential NSA infiltrators a priority.
It was impossible to see the shoreline through the dark wash of waves penning them in.
“Hang on!” Zeke yelled.
Noa clutched the nearest rope, her stomach lurching as the boat swept right. A wave caught the side of it, and she started to slide across deck. Black water climbed the gunwale below her, opening up to receive her like a giant mouth.
Another shift, and the boat leveled.
And just like that, the waves abated. Zeke throttled down the engine. Noa saw a flash of something big and green on their left: a buoy. As if on cue, the rain diminished in intensity. She could make out the faint lights of houses on either side. They were cruising down a narrow channel between strips of land.
“The Kickemuit River,” Zeke explained. “There’s a nature sanctuary here. We can ditch the boat and make it to the road.”
How the hell does he know that
? Noa wondered. She was relieved that Zeke had gotten her message about the facility, but she hadn’t expected him to actually turn up there. Although if he hadn’t, she might not have survived the encounter with Cole.
He turned the boat into an even narrower canal. Long wet grass brushed the sides of the boat as they approached a small wooden bridge. The boat ran aground and Zeke cut the engine.
“We’ll have to wade a little, but it’s not deep,” he said, coming back to her. “You okay to walk? I wasn’t sure if you got hurt back there.”
“I’m fine,” she said, before adding, “Zeke.”
His eyes met hers and he smiled. “How’d you figure out my name, anyway?”
“Please,” she said. “A6M0? It took five minutes to find out that’s what the Allies called Japanese fighter planes in World War II.”
“Guess I’ll have to come up with a new handle,” Zeke said reflectively. “’Course, you probably will, too.”
“Probably,” Noa said. Which was a shame. She’d liked being Rain. It suited her.
“Laptop in there?” he asked, pointing to her bag.
“Yeah, but the saltwater probably ruined it,” she said ruefully.
“Then leave it; we’ll need to travel light. Any and all cell phones, too, especially the one you used to email me.” Noticing her reluctance, he said gently, “It’s easy enough to get more, right?”
Noa hesitated, then dug out the devices. He was right. She popped out the flash drive that held the Project Persephone files and tucked it in her pocket. With a pang of regret, she released the MacBook into the water, followed by the cell phone. She watched them vanish below the surface.
Zeke glanced up. It was late, but a few houses across the way were still lit.
“Where are we going?” Noa asked. “What about Peter?”
“The guy we left behind?”
Noa flinched and nodded.
Zeke shrugged. “Nothing we can do for him right now, especially if we get caught. Let’s get out of here.”
“Then you’ll tell me everything?” she demanded.
“Everything I know, yeah.” A shadow crossed Zeke’s face. “But you probably know the worst of it already.”
They both looked at the coolers lining the back of the boat. Five of them, strapped together and lashed to the crab pots. Noa shuddered, wondering how many kids were inside. One per cooler? Or had they managed to squeeze in more?
“Let’s go,” Zeke said, more gently this time.
Noa followed him, sloshing through the shallows toward shore.
P
eter slowly opened his eyes. He had to be dreaming. He was lying in his bed at home. The curtains were pulled back, and soft wintry light dappled the floor. Everything was just as he’d left it: closet door open, empty hangers dangling, drawers spilling their contents.
He tried to sit up and immediately collapsed back against the pillows, panting. Everything hurt and his head swam.
What the hell happened?
he wondered.
How’d I end up here?
Soft footsteps down the hall. His bedroom door cracked, then was thrown open. His mother rushed in, eagerness lighting up her face. Priscilla slowed as she approached the bed, clearly uncertain of her reception. “You’re finally awake!” Relief flooded her voice. “Oh, Peter, you had us so worried.”
“What happened?” he asked, slowly managing to get up on his elbows.
“Here, let me.” She reached behind him and fluffed the pillows. He fell gratefully back against them. “We’re not sure, exactly. We were hoping you could tell us.”
“How did I get here?” Peter asked. It all came back in a rush: Cole beating him. Noa running for the boat. That guy who came out of nowhere and threw a bomb. The feds storming in. “Did the FBI bring me?”
“The FBI?” His mother looked perplexed. “No, honey. The police found you and brought you to a hospital in Rhode Island. Although what possessed you to go down there … your father and I just assumed you were with Amanda, then we got this terrible phone call.” Her brow furrowed with concern. “Anyway, the doctors didn’t want to move you, but you should have seen that hospital. No way we were leaving you under their care. They said it was only a concussion, anyway.”
“So they didn’t arrest me?” he asked.
“Well …” His mother plucked at the comforter. “The police figured that all things considered, you’d probably learned your lesson. And trespassing is only a misdemeanor. Those poor other children—you were so lucky, Peter,” she said fiercely, leaning in and planting a kiss on his forehead. “You were the only one to survive the fire.”
“Fire? What fire?” Peter’s brain felt sluggish, dulled. It took a minute to process each of her sentences; the words seemed disjointed, part of a different story. He wondered if that was due to the concussion. “What about Noa?”
“Who?” Light dawned in his mother’s eyes. “Was she one of the other kids that was … staying there with you?”
Peter dropped back against the pillows and closed his eyes. It was easier to focus that way, and his mother’s rare outpouring of emotion was starting to irk him in light of how they’d left things. “Just tell me what they told you.”
“Well, apparently, a group of kids—you among them—were camping out at an old naval base in Rhode Island,” she said slowly. “And there was a fire. Something about an illegal generator. Most of the kids were overcome by smoke, or fumes, or something … they’re not quite sure. But you’re the only one they found alive. And we’re so happy you’re okay, Peter,” she said, voice softening. “I’m sorry you ended up there. You should never have been placed in that position.”
“But wait, what about …” His voice trailed off. It didn’t seem possible. The FBI had been there. They’d seen the dead kids, the tables. The computers filled with all that incriminating information. “So there wasn’t anything else? They didn’t say anything about experiments?”
“Experiments?” his mother asked in a guarded tone. “What kind of experiments?”
“Those kids weren’t squatters; they were being experimented on there,” he said impatiently. “Project Persephone. The one Mason—”