When We Wake (18 page)

Read When We Wake Online

Authors: Karen Healey

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction / Science Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction / Action & Adventure - General, #Juvenile Fiction / People & Places - Australia & Oceania, #Juvenile Fiction / Science & Technology

BOOK: When We Wake
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“—sixteen-year-old girl,” Marie said over him. “Who should be allowed some of the freedoms she enjoyed before her traumatic and untimely death.”

Dawson shook his head. “I thought you believed in the vital importance of this project, Dr. Carmen.”

“I thought you were above such an obvious attempt at emotional manipulation, Colonel Dawson.”

Whoa. Go Marie.

“I think this conversation is over,” she continued. “We both have work to do.”

The worst thing was that I couldn’t see Dawson’s face. I had a feeling the picture would have kept me warm on cold nights. If cold nights existed anymore.

Gregor and Zaneisha were still exchanging put-upon glances as they escorted me to Bethari’s front door. She met me with squeals and ushered me into the living room.

“Mami, this is Tegan Oglietti.”

Bethari’s mother was a round, sturdy woman with an amused glint in her black eyes. She was still in her uniform and khaki headscarf, obviously having just gotten home from work.

“Thank you for having me, Captain Miyahputri,” I said, and handed over the fruit basket Marie had pushed into my hands as I went out the door. “Dr. Carmen says hello.”

“You’re very welcome, Tegan. Sergeant, Master Sergeant, would you like a drink?”

“No, thank you, Captain.”

“Where will you guys stay?” I asked.

Gregor grunted.

“Outside,” Zaneisha said. “Are you sure you—”

“Yep.”

“You can signal us on your EarRing. At any time. For any reason, if you notice anything strange—”

“What about when I go to sleep? I’ve never worn earrings to bed before.”

“Learn,” Gregor said.

Zaneisha scanned the hallway, the ceiling, the floor, and then looked straight at me. “Our martial arts training has been delayed twice,” she said. “We are starting tomorrow.”

I ignored the way it was phrased as a threat and beamed at her. “That sounds fun.”

Bethari was bouncing impatiently. “Come on, Teeg, let’s go upstairs!”

“Okay. Bye, guys! Have a good night!”

Bethari laughed as we went up. “That was mean.”

I shrugged as Bethari opened her door. “Not my fault they have to stay up all night keeping watch from the car.”

“Actually, it kind of is,” Joph said. She was sitting cross-legged on the bed. “Geya, Teeg.”

I looked at her. Then at Bethari. “Um?”

“Joph’s going to stay here and move around. And cover for us, if necessary.”

I gave up and sat on the floor. “Cool. Thanks, Joph.”

“I did some research into past-time sleepovers,” Joph said. “Do we really have to braid each other’s hair?”

“I have the only hair long enough for braiding, so let’s not bother,” Bethari said, unwinding her headscarf. Long black waves tumbled down her back. “Mami’s not going to bed for a while, and I have prayer in a bit, so we may as well have some fun while we wait. Anyone got good games? I want to kill some zombies.”

A few hundred dead zombies later, we were on our way. Bethari had dark clothes for both of us, and I rubbed her dark purple eye shadow all over my face to prevent my white skin from flashing.

“You look ridiculous,” she whispered.

“No one’s going to see me,” I pointed out, my voice just as quiet. “At least, I hope not. You know what to do, Joph?”

Joph yawned. “Keeping watch isn’t that complicated. I’ll call Bethi if anything goes wrong. Give me your phone.”

“Why?” I asked, taking the EarRing out.

“They can probably track you with it,” she said. “My parents tried that all the time when I was a ween, until Bethi showed me how to disable it.”

“Won’t they know if we turn it off?”

“Probably. So I’ll just wear it.” Joph slipped the phone into the piercing on her other ear. “There. Have fun!”

Bethari’s eyes were glued to her replacement computer. “The security screen’s going down… now.”

I wrenched open the window and started down the trellis, hugging the wall. A few decades earlier, it had probably held roses. But the roses were gone, and what remained was a convenient exit route.

Bethari, for all her apparent skill with digital crime, didn’t seem to be experienced at this kind of subterfuge. When we hit the bottom, she started giggling.

“Shhhh,” I hissed, and hustled her toward the back wall.

She boosted me up, hands steady under my feet, and then I helped yank her up and over. She landed as lightly as I did on the other side. Cheerleading obviously lent itself well to breaking and entering.

The address was a warehouse in an industrial area, a forty-minute walk from Bethari’s house. I made Bethari stop jogging as soon as we were out of the immediate range of her house. It was strange not to have streetlights; they were probably considered a waste of energy.

“People notice runners,” I said. “We walk from here.”

Bethari made a face of mock terror. “I don’t know if my nerves can take it.”

“Some fearless journo you are.”

“Speaking of! I have a lead on a story, and it’s a good one. Did
you know that poorer countries get charged prices that they can’t afford for patented medicines?”

“Sure. That happened in my time, too.”

“Well, it’s still happening, and it’s, what do you call it? Totally crapular?”

“Craptacular?”

“I love your slang. Yes. Things like Travis Fuller Syndrome and Maldonado Disease kill a lot of people, but they’re easy to treat—
if
you have the right drugs. One course of Serbolax will completely cure Travis Fuller, but it costs about twelve hundred dollars.”

It took a second, but I converted that to about sixty dollars in my time, or way out of reach for your average person below the world poverty line. “And they don’t discount, of course.” I was watching the few passing cars. Nobody seemed to be paying any attention to us.

“No. And because they’re protecting their patents and the vast amounts of money they can make on them, they don’t let anyone make generic, low-cost versions. But people are anyway. They’re stealing or reverse-engineering the formula and smuggling in the drugs, or making them right in the countries that need them most.”

“Isn’t that dangerous? Taking homemade or smuggled medicines?”

“Not as dangerous as spewing up your lungs,” Bethari said bluntly. “Travis Fuller is
awful
. Anyway, today my sources confirmed that there are chemists making the medicines in
Melbourne, and I have a lead on a customs officer who lets things slide through. I want to do an in-depth series, talking about why people take these risks, and how the pharma companies are losing their grip on the market.”

“Uh-huh,” I said, scanning the street for watchers on foot.

“Poor regional governments aren’t even bothering to ask them for help anymore; they talk to the smugglers instead. So, of course, the companies are pressuring
their
governments—including ours—to introduce more sanctions and tougher penalties for home chemists who make patented drugs, and—am I boring you?”

“No. This is it.” I leaned casually against the wall and jumped when it stung me.

“Hint about the future,” Bethari said. “Don’t touch private property unless you have a handy friend with a good computer. Though not as good as her former, and much mourned,
other
computer. Let’s go around the side.”

The gap between two walled yards was barely wide enough to qualify as an alley, and we had to feel our way down the walls as feral cats hissed at us.

Bethari stuck her tongue between her teeth, made me hold her computer, and got to work. In the light of the screen, her fingers gleamed as they moved through minute, intricate gestures.

I suddenly missed Koko, who had also stayed behind with Joph.

“They don’t have much security,” Bethari murmured. “Okay. Located the closed-circuit camera controls. Just need to branch the broadcast to… huh.”

“What?”

“Teeg, I hate to say it, but you might have the wrong address.”

I turned her computer around to stare at the footage of the warehouse interior.

It was empty.

CHAPTER NINE
We Can Work It Out

“This was definitely the place,” I said, staring at the screen. It was showing night-vision pictures of a bare asphalt parking lot, dusty offices upstairs, and a huge, concrete floor decorated by only a few big scrap-metal bins—also empty.

“Well, there’s nothing in there now. And the security’s totally minimal. It’s not what I’d expect to see at a secret facility.”

“Could it be some sort of loop? Could the cameras be showing us fake footage when there’s actually a whole ton of animals in there?”

“Animals?”

“It’s called the Ark Project,” I said. “My money’s on illegal animal testing of cryonic treatments, but I’m trying to keep an open mind.”

“I was thinking a gene bank of extinct animals that they’re exploiting for genegineered soldiers, but I might watch too
many movies,” Bethari said. “To answer your question, no, there’s no loop; I’d know. What we’re seeing is the actual footage.”

“Why would there be surveillance cameras on an empty building?”

“To keep out squatters? I don’t know. It obviously belongs to someone. They might just check the feed every now and then.”

“I want to go inside.”

“Hacking the locks will be more difficult,” she said. “I’m not sure that—”

“Shhh!” I could hear the distinctive rumble of a truck approaching. The cats set up their screeching again, and we moved deeper into the alley.

Even back that far, we could hear the gates open.

“Tegan,” Bethari whispered. “Look!”

On the screen, the footage of the parking lot showed the gates opening and the truck driving in. The picture on the side of the truck declared it a humanure collector.

“This is
not
a compost-treatment plant,” Bethari said.

“Holy crap,” I said as a man swung himself out of the passenger seat and dropped to the ground. “Bethari, can you get a close-up?”

She fiddled her fingers in the air. The camera zoomed in on the man’s face. I hissed.

“Do you know him?”

“That’s Colonel Trevor Dawson,” I said. “My keeper. And head of Operation New Beginning.”

“He’s not in uniform.”

Those loose overalls were definitely not approved army wear.

“Wait, what’s that?” I said.

Something was happening in the warehouse. One of the scrap-metal bins was moving by itself, rolling away to reveal a large metallic rectangle set securely into the floor.

“A trapdoor?” Bethari said incredulously.

The rectangle rose. It was actually the top of an elevator, about the size of my underground bedroom, but we could see only the metallic back.

“The angle,” I said urgently.

“I’m trying, I’m trying. Okay, another camera in the corner… there.”

Two large containers were wheeled out of the elevator and into the yard, escorted by four people in equally nondescript black clothing. Dawson had opened the back of the truck and was saying something to one of the escorts, a tall woman with short brown curls.

“Can we get audio?”

“Um, if the cameras have mics, I can try a subroutine….” She did more magic with her fingers, but Dawson had stopped speaking. The only sounds were the grunts of the escorts and the scrape of the containers as they were gently slid into the back of the truck.

“What the hell is in there?” I wondered.

“I would give all my teeth to know.”

Dawson nodded at the escorts, and they all straightened, saluting.

“Dismissed,” he said, his voice small and tinny.

“They’re all army,” Bethari said, sounding distressed.

“We knew they probably would be,” I said.

“I know. It’s just hard.”

We glanced at each other, two army brats in perfect accord. It was uncomfortable to think that our protectors—our families—were up to something secret, and maybe no good.

We were both quiet as the truck rumbled past our hiding place again. The other soldiers went back into the warehouse, and Bethari was watching intently as the curly-haired woman walked to the elevator.

“Black shoe alligator glue,” the woman said, her voice clear, and Bethari stabbed the air with one finger. “Password recorded,” she said. “Might be useful.”

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