Read The Ask and the Answer Online
Authors: Patrick Ness
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 10-12), #Children's Books - Young Adult Fiction, #Friendship, #Social Issues, #Law & Crime, #Violence, #Social Issues - Violence, #Science Fiction; Fantasy; Magic, #Space colonies, #Social problems
190
Davy thinks so, too. "Oh, yeah?" He reaches for the rifle slung on his back, his Noise firing it again and again at fleeing Spackle.
1017 stands his ground. He looks me in the eye and clicks again.
Yeah, definitely rude.
He backs off, walking away but still staring at us, one hand rubbing his metal band. I turn to Davy, who's got his rifle up and pointed at 1017 as he goes.
"Don't," I say.
"Why not?" Davy says. "Who's gonna stop us?" I don't got the answer, cuz it seems there's nobody.
The bombs have come every third or fourth day. No one knows where they'll be or how they're planted, but
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!
The evening of the sixth bomb, a small fission reactor this time, Mayor Ledger comes in with a blackened eye and a swollen nose. "What happened?" I ask.
"Soldiers." He spits. He takes up his dinner plate, stew again, and winces as he takes the first bite. "What did you do?"
His Noise rises a little and he turns an angry eye on me. "I didn't
do
anything."
"You know what I mean."
He grumbles some, eats some more stew, then says, "Some of them got the brilliant idea that
I
was the Answer. Me."
"You?" i say, maybe a bit too surprised.
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He stands, setting down his stew, mostly uneaten, so I know he must be
really
sore. "They can't find the women responsible and the soldiers are looking for someone to blame." He stares outta one of the openings, watching night fall across the town that was once his home. "And did our President do anything to stop my beating?" he says, almost to himself. "No, he did not."
I keep eating, trying to keep my Noise quiet of things I don't wanna think.
"People are talking," Mayor Ledger says, keeping his voice low, "about a new healer, a young one no one's ever seen before, going in and out of this very cathedral a while back, now working at the house of healing Mistress Coyle used to run."
Viola,
I think, loud and clear before I can cover it.
Mayor Ledger turns to me. "That's one you won't have seen. It's off the main road and down a little hill toward the river about halfway to the monastery. There are two barns together on the road where you need to turn." He looks out the opening again. "You can't miss it."
"I can't get away from Davy," I say.
"I'm sure I don't know what you're talking about," Mayor Ledger says, lying back down on his bed. "I'm merely telling you idle facts about our fair city."
My breathing gets heavier, my mind and Noise racing thru possibilities about how I can get there, how I can get away from Davy to find the house of healing.
(to find her)
It isn't till later that I think to ask, "Who's Mistress Coyle?"
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Even tho it's dark, I can feel Mayor Ledger's Noise get a little redder. "Ah, well," he says, into the night. "She'd be your Answer, wouldn't she?"
"That's the last of 'em," I say, watching Spackle 1182 slink away, rubbing her wrist.
"About effing time," Davy says, flopping down onto the grass. There's a crispness to the air but the sun is out and the sky is mostly clear.
"What are we sposed to do now?" I say.
"No effing idea."
I stand there and watch the Spackle. If you didn't know no better, you really wouldn't think they were much smarter than sheep.
"They
ain't,"
Davy says, closing his eyes to the sun.
"Shut up," I say.
But I mean,
look
at 'em, tho.
They just sit on the grass, still no Noise, not saying nothing, half of 'em staring at us, half of 'em staring at each other, clicking now and then but hardly ever moving, not doing nothing with their hands or their time. All these white faces, looking drained of life, just sitting by the walls, waiting and waiting for
something,
whatever that something's gonna be.
"And the time for that something is now, Todd," booms a voice behind us. Davy scrambles to his feet as the Mayor comes in thru the main opening, his horse tied up outside.
But he looks at me, only me. "Ready for your new job?"
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***
"Ain't barely talked to me for weeks," Davy's fuming as we ride home. Things didn't go so well twixt him and his pa. "Just
keep watch on Todd
this and
hurry up with the Spackle
that." His hands're gripped tightly round the reins. "Do I even get a
thank you?
Do I even get a
nice job, David?"
"We were sposed to band the Spackle in a week," I say, repeating what the Mayor told him. "It took us more'n twice that."
He turns to me, his Noise really rising red. "We got
attacked]
How's that sposed to be
my
fault?"
"I ain't saying it was," I say back but my Noise is remembering the band around 0038's neck.
"So you blame me,
too,
do you?" He's stopped his horse and is glaring at me, leaning forward in the saddle, ready to jump off.
I open my mouth to answer but then I glance down the road behind him.
There's two barns by a turning in the road, a turning that heads down to the river.
I look back to Davy quickly.
He's got an evil smile. "What's down there?"
"Nothing."
"Yer girl, ain't it?" he sneers. "Eff you, Davy."
"No, pigpiss," he says, sliding off his saddle to the ground, his Noise rising even redder. "Eff
you."
There ain't nothing to do but fight.
194
***
"Soldiers?'' Mayor Ledger asks, seeing my bruises and blood as I come into the tower for dinner.
"Never you mind," I growl. It was me and Davy's worst fight in ages. I'm so sore I can barely reach my bed.
"You going to eat that?" Mayor Ledger asks.
A certain word in my Noise lets him know that no, I ain't gonna eat that. He picks it up and starts chomping away without even a thank you.
"You trying to eat yer way to freedom?" I say.
"Says a boy who's always had food provided for him."
"I ain't a boy."
"The supplies we brought when we landed only lasted a year," he says, twixt mouthfuls, "by which time our hunting and farming wasn't quite up to where it should have been." He takes another bite. "Lean times make you appreciate a hot meal, Todd."
"What is it about men that makes them need to turn everything into a lesson?" I cover my face with my arm, then take it away cuz of how much my blackening eye hurts.
Night falls again. The air is even cooler and I leave most of my clothes on as I get under the blanket. Mayor Ledger starts to snore, dreaming about walking in a house with endless rooms and not being able to find the exit.
This is the safest time I got to think about her.
Cuz is she really out there?
And is she part of this Answer thing?
And other things, too.
Like what would she say if she saw me?
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If she saw what I did every day? And with
who?
I swallow the cool night air and blink away the wet in my eyes.
(are you still with me, Viola?) (are you?)
An hour later and I'm still not asleep. Something's nagging at me and I'm turning in my sheets, trying to clear my Noise of whatever it is, trying to calm down enough so I can be ready for the new job the Mayor's got planned for us tomorrow, one which don't sound all that bad, if I'm honest.
But it's like I'm missing something, something obvious, right in front of my face.
Something--
i sit up, listening to the snoring Noise of Mayor Ledger, the sleeping roar of New Prentisstown outside, the night birds chirping, even the river rushing by in the distance.
There was no
ker-thunk
sound after Mr. Collins let me in.
i think back.
Definitely not.
I look thru the darkness toward the door.
He forgot to lock it.
Right now, right this second.
It's unlocked.
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ii 16 WHO ARE YOU
***
(Viola )
"I HEAR NOISE OUTSIDE," Mrs. Fox says as I refill her water jug for the night.
"It'd only be remarkable if you
didn't,
Mrs. Fox."
"Just by the window-"
"Soldiers smoking their cigarettes."
"No, I'm sure it was-"
"I'm really very busy, Mrs. Fox, if you don't mind." I replace her pillows and empty her bedpan. She doesn't speak again until I'm almost ready to go.
"Things aren't like they used to be," she says quietly. "You can say that again."
"Haven used to be better," she says. "Not perfect. But better than this."
And she just looks out of her window.
I'm dying with tiredness at the end of my rounds but I sit down
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on my bed and take out the note that hasn't left my pocket. I read it for the hundredth, thousandth time.
My girl,
Now is the time you must choose.
Can we count on you?
The Answer
Not even a name, not even
her
name.
Almost three weeks I've had this note. Three weeks and nothing, so maybe that's how much they think they can count on me. Not another note, not another sign, just stuck here in this house with Corinne-or Mistress Wyatt, as I have to call her now-and the patients. Women who've fallen sick in the normal course of things, yes, but also women who've returned from "interviews" with the Mayor's men about the Answer, women with bruises and cuts, women with broken ribs, broken fingers, broken arms. Women with burns.
And those are the lucky ones, the ones who aren't in prison.
And every third or fourth day,
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!
And more are arrested and more are sent here. And there's no word from Mistress Coyle. And no word from the Mayor.
No word about why I'm being left alone. You'd think I'd be the one who'd be taken in first, the one who'd have interview after interview, the one who'd be sitting rotting in a prison cell.
"But nothing," I whisper. "Nothing at all."
And no word from Todd.
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I close my eyes. I'm too tired to feel anything. Every day, I look for ways to get to the communications tower but there are soldiers
everywhere
now, way too many to find a pattern, and it only gets worse with each new bomb.
"I've got to do
something,"
I say out loud. "I have to or I'll go crazy." I laugh. "I'll go crazy and start talking to myself."
I laugh some more, a lot more than how funny it actually is.
And there's a knock at my window.
I sit up, my heart pumping.
"Mistress Coyle?" I say.
Is this it? Is it now?
Is this where I have to choose?
Can
they count on me?
(but is that
Noise
I can hear...?)
I get to my knees on the bed and pull the curtains back just far enough to look through a slit outside, expecting that frown, those fingers going over her forehead-
But it's not her.
It's not her at all.
"Todd!"
And I'm throwing back the sash and lifting up the glass and he's leaning in and his Noise is saying my name and I'm putting my arms around him and dragging him inside, actually
lifting
him off the ground and pulling him through my window and he's climbing up and we fall onto my bed and
199
I'm on my back and he's lying on top of me and my face is close to his and I remember how we were like this after we'd jumped under the waterfall with Aaron right behind us and I looked right into his eyes.
And I knew we'd be safe.
"Todd."
In the light of my room, I see his eye is blackened and there's blood on his nose and I'm saying, "What happened? Are you hurt? I can-"
But he just says, "It's you."
I don't know how much time passes with us just lying there, just feeling that the other is really there, really true, really
alive,
feeling the safety of him, his weight against mine, the roughness of his fingers touching my face, his warmth and his smell and the dustiness of his clothes, and we barely speak and his Noise is roiling with feeling, with complicated things, with memories of me being shot, of how he felt when he thought I was dying, of how I feel now at his fingertips, but at the front of it all, he's just saying, Viola, Viola, Viola.
And it's Todd.
Bloody hell, it's
Todd.
And everything's all right.
And then there are footsteps in the hall.
Footsteps that stop right outside my room.
We both look toward the door. A shadow is cast underneath it, two legs of someone standing just on the other side.
I wait for the knock.
I wait for the order to get him out of here.