inDIVISIBLE (13 page)

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Authors: Ryan Hunter

BOOK: inDIVISIBLE
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“That’s a lo
ng way down,” I said, the second story looking much higher when planning to jump from it.

T squeezed my hand. “It’s our only choice.”

A key rattled in the doorknob.

“Land with your knees bent—aim for the grass—” T said.

A three foot wide strip separated the asphalt from the building.
Of course I could hit the grass … I hoped.
I nodded.

The
doorknob turned.

Panic filled my throat
. I held to the frame to keep from falling face first from my own shaking.

“Right behind me, Brynn.”

I nodded again—like a puppet without a brain.

T jumped.

His knees bent as he hit, rolling to soften the impact. The first guard burst into the room, yelling, “Don’t move!”

I jumped. My knees gave
way when I hit and I sprawled across the grass, my ankle pinching. T pulled me to my feet. “Nice. Let’s go.”

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 15

 

 

 

Flames burst along my spine and whether I’d planned to or not, my legs propelled me forward, away from the heat and the pain of the ERG. I ran faster than I’d ever run before, rounding the corner of the building to sprint across the darkened parking lot. I dove through bushes as floodlights came on, illuminating the entire block housing the Alliance building.

We didn’t stop. We didn’t even slow or think about where we had to go next. We simply ran until our legs gave out and we lay gasping in a ditch for breath.

“You okay?” I asked T finally.

“Yeah. You?”

I nodded, too tired to form the simple response.

“They saw us,” he said.

I swiped my face with the back of my bandage. “I know.”

“We’re probab
ly all over the PCA news by now.”

“They work fast,” I agreed.

T rolled over, propped himself on an elbow and stared at the grass beyond. “We can’t be seen in public now. The Citizens think we’re terrorists. They’ll turn us in.”

The way we referred to others as Citizens didn’t really surprise me. Thinking of myself as a terrorist, however, made me want to
both laugh and scream. For the first time I felt like a complete outcast. I had no home, no family, no sensor. “What are we, T?”

He looked at me then. “Hmmm?”

“We’re not terrorists.”

He shook his head.

“We’re not Citizens.”

“Not by Alliance definition,” he agreed.

“So what are we?”

“Did you read the files?”

I recited Cray’s address in my mind again, relieved I remembered it after the adrenaline dump in the business district. “Yes.”

“I like to think we’re a part of that society mentioned in those reports, the Freemen.”

I snuggled in closer to T, hoping his body heat would steal away the chill of the damp spring grass. “I like the sound of that.”

T
he moisture from the ditch clung to my clothing and skin, making a great chill conductor, and I sat, wrapping my arms around my knees.

“I think we have to join them,” he said.

Deep down I felt the same way, but I had to ask, “What about that safe haven we talked about?”

T scrubbed his hands together. “
I can’t forget what we saw on his computer … I can’t just sit back and live as though we’re in some utopia, like the Alliance portrays. Can you?”

I rested my chin on my knees. Thousands of names were on that watch list, and that’s just the one that I opened. What of the others? I couldn’t sit back and do nothing when so many waited in line for the same fate as my father. “I want the safe haven,” I whispered, “but I know I’ll never find it now that I know what’s really happening in One United.”

“It won’t be easy, but we’ve got to get those files to the Freemen,” T said. “I want to join up with them.”

It was our only chance
, and I knew it. We couldn’t survive in a place where Citizens were taught to fear everything that looked suspicious, who were so brainwashed as to believe every word the Alliance published on their manipulating PCAs. But without food, maps, bedding …

“How are we going to survive
the hike?” I asked.

“I think the question you should be asking is how will we survive if we don’t?”
His straight, perfect nose and strong jaw made him look like some sort of Greek god in the dim moonlight. “Even the squatter cities will come under attack eventually … and if they know where we are—”

“—we don’t stand a chance anywhere.”
I cleared my throat, my stomach fluttering when I said, “I’m glad you came for me.”

T tilted his head and smiled sadly. “Me too.”

A dog barked, and I flinched. “Nervous?” T asked with a smirk.

“What makes you say that?
” I tried to joke.

He pushed to his feet and helped me to mine before asking, “You remember that address?”

I rattled it off to him, and he pointed south. “It’s a bit of a walk. Care for a moonlight stroll?”

I took his arm as he offered it and walked casually beside him. “You know there’s a curfew in this town, don’t you?”

“Yes, which is why I’ll push you into the ditch if we see anyone coming.”

I shoved him playfully. “
Aren’t you a gentleman.”

He smiled again
. “Ah, now you play that card. Being a gentleman’s outdated. We have equal rights now, don’t you remember?”

My eyebrows arched
, and I laughed. “You’re right. So, I’ll be the one to push you into the ditch.”

“Only if you get to me before I get to you.”

My hand slid down his arm until our palms met and our fingers intertwined. “I think I’ll just leave it up to you, but remember, I’m dragging you with me, wherever you end up pushing me.”

T’s dimple shone in the moonlight
, and our hands naturally began to swing with our stride. We turned into the thickest of subdivisions to begin our walk south, avoiding main roads and well-lit streets. A Citizen calling us in wasn’t as threatening as a security officer driving past and seeing us.

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 16

 

 

 

We made it to Cray’s home well after midnight. Of course, we had no way of knowing the exact time, but we were exhausted enough to believe it had taken us an entire night to make the trek. My stomach growled, and I clamped my arms around my middle as if to mute it.


Shhh—” T teased. “You’ll wake them.”

We strolled pas
t the Carmichal residence and perched in a neighbor’s bushes. T stripped off his backpack and rummaged inside until he found two energy bars he must have taken from Mary’s kitchen.

He handed one to me and peeled open the second, taking a huge bite before gnawing on the fruit and nut mixture. I hesitated but the growling persisted until I opened my own and devoured it like I hadn’t eaten in a week.

My stomach quit protesting but sill I shivered. T scooted behind me and wrapped his arms around me. His warmth radiated through my damp shirt, and I leaned into him, absorbing his heat as if it belonged to me. His arms tightened, and my head fell back into his shoulder before I allowed my eyes to close, my breathing becoming shallow as I drifted into another world where people laughed openly, cried with dear friends and made up their own minds about where to work and live.

             
A dream
, I reminded myself when I woke.
That life could be nothing more than a dream
.

I stretched , aware that T no longer held me. Instead my head rested on a rolled up shirt from his backpack. Another lay draped over my arms. I sat quickly, the sun already drying the meager dew.
Faint footsteps had trampled the grass but they faded out before they gave me a clear indication of where he’d gone. I gathered up the shirts, shoved them into my own backpack and slung it over my shoulder before sneaking further into the bushes, out of view of any Citizens who’d be leaving for work soon.

I crouched and waited for Cray’s mother to leave, for Cray to come outside, but mostly for T to return.
Because even if Cray came out, I didn’t have the jammer. I couldn’t talk to him without getting him into trouble and giving the Alliance my location in the process—unless his sensor lacked the listening device that I’d had. I pulled the rubber band from my hair and smoothed it back before replacing it in a low ponytail. I searched the yard behind me, the road, and the yards across the street. With so little obstructing my view, it should have been easy to find him.

The fron
t door of the entry opened, with a bicycle wheel appearing next. What if T wasn’t here when Cray came out? What then? We stay camped in his yard all day? Hiding behind what? A woman emerged, pushing the bicycle, her dress pants clipped at the ankles to avoid the chain. She strapped her large, black bag to the rack on the back of the bicycle, straddled it and took off at a leisurely pace.

I sighed and sat back in the dark soil.
The door behind me opened and I scampered back to my feet, spinning, my hair getting caught in the branches. A man in his fifties strolled out of the entry, a thick briefcase swinging by his side. He eased down the street, checked the time on his PCA then waited at what I assumed was a bus stop.

The man stood motionless, eyes ahead as if under inspection. I crouched lower
, my entangled hair yanking against my scalp as it clung to the branches above me. I tried to free my hair but it only knotted tighter around the spiky leaves. Afraid the rustling would alert him, I stopped trying to untangle my hair from the bush and waited—while strands pulled from my scalp one at a time. 

The bus turned the corner, the shiny silver paint job shimmering in the mornin
g light, the tires humming as the engine purred. It stopped, doors opening long enough for the man to enter and swipe his hand across the sensor.

Cray’s entry door opened again
, and I wanted to curse T. Where had he gone? Cray was about to leave and we couldn’t even talk to him.

The bus continued toward me, men and women in business suits looking into their laps, no doubt at the news reports fabricated on their PCAs.
I absently reached for my own, curious what it had to say about the Alliance building break in. I dropped my hand and wondered if I’d ever break the habit. Cray’s door opened further, and I wished the bus would hurry past, wished T would return with the jammer. As the front of the bus came even with Cray’s entry, T walked around the corner of the building and clasped the doorknob as if he were about to enter.

The bus
continued past while T and Cray struggled over the door, T holding the other boy inside just long enough for the bus to turn the corner. He stepped back, grabbed Cray’s arm and wedged it up behind him. Cray began to cry out as T pressed the jammer into his right palm, holding both his arm and jammer in place as he led him behind the entry and across the tiny lawn.

I
broke a stubborn branch from the bush and ripped my hair free of it while I bolted toward the struggling boys. T hauled Cray toward the back of the entry, closer to the bushes—our only source of cover. Cray was swearing. T hadn’t yet said a word.

I rushed around T, caught Cray’s chin in my hand and forced him to look at me.

He silenced.

His eyes widened and he shook his head back and forth.

“I need your help,” I whispered.

He jerked on his arm and T nearly lost hold.

“Don’t talk to me.” He gave me the sign of silence with his free hand.

“The jammer will stop the transmissions,” I said.

T lowered Cray to the ground, and I followed suit, all of us sitting low so as to attract as little attention as possible from the road.

“Please hold onto it,” I begged.

Cray nodded, and T reluctantly released Cray’s arm.

He brought it in front of him and stared at the metal ball, mouth rounding as he turned it over in his palm.

T reached out, clamped his hand around Cray’s forcing him to make a fist over the object to hold it as close to the sensor as possible.

“What did the news reports say?” T demanded.

Cray looked from T to me and asked, “Who is this guy?”

“A friend. He’s helping me.”

“Looks like he’s gotten you into trouble.”

I shook my head and opened my mouth to speak when Cray asked, “What about you two? They must be monitoring your sensors, know where you are.”

“Then our pictures aren’t plastered all over the news bulletins?”

“I haven’t seen them,” he said. “Why? What did you do?
” He looked back and forth between us, swearing again. “If they’re reading your sensors, and you did something to tick them off, they’ll think I’m involved. They’ll come for all of us.”

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