Authors: David Wellington
Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Horror, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction
Jake laughed. “You know, that’s exactly what she said.”
Cody nodded. “Yeah. Probably because—”
“Because why?” Jake was breathing heavily now.
“It’s probably because I told her so. I told her she was breaking your concentration. Don’t hit me! I did it for your own good.”
“You know, that’s what Mr. Zuraw keeps telling me. That he does things for with my best interest at heart.” Jake looked down and saw that both his hands had balled up into fists.
“Come on, it’s not like that. You need to concentrate. Anyway. I’ve had my doubts about her. For a long time. I don’t think she’s right for you.” Cody took a step back.
“Are you jealous?” Jake asked, anger and surprise bursting through him.
“Jake, buddy, I love you, but not like that,” Cody joked. “I’m just saying she might not be exactly what she appears to be.”
“That,” Jake said, trying to stay calm, “is one the craziest things I have ever heard. You’re suggesting what, exactly? That she works for Mr. Zuraw? That she’s a mole, watching me and reporting back to him my every move?”
“Ah.” Cody looked stricken. “I didn’t want—”
“What, Cody? What didn’t you want?”
Cody took off his glasses and rubbed at them with the hem of his shirt. “I didn’t want to say that out loud. Not until I was sure.”
Jake stormed off angrily, headed anywhere but near Cody. If he wasn’t careful he was going to punch his best friend. But Cody didn’t seem aware of how close that was. He chased after Jake, almost dancing around him, trying to talk to him.
“Hey, we need to think clearly at all times, right?” Cody asked. “If you’re going to survive these tests we need to pay attention. We need to not miss anything that might be out of the ordinary. I was simply being—”
“—Paranoid?”
“—Cautious,” Cody insisted, his voice very soft. “You know they’ll do anything to manipulate you. Anything at all. Do you really think they wouldn’t stoop to using a mole to get to you, to find out what your plans are?”
“Go away, Cody. Be smart and shut up now.”
But he wouldn’t. He kept at it. “That day we broke into Mr. Zuraw’s office,” Cody said, “she had an appointment with him. She was there to talk to Mr. Zuraw about something. What could it have been?”
“Maybe where she’s going to college?” Jake suggested, bitterly. “He is the guidance counselor.”
“Then, when the Proctor said ‘sleep’, she didn’t. Before now we were operating under the notion that whenever they said ‘sleep’ the whole school passed out—except for you, Jake. Now it turns out she’s immune, too. Then there’s this story that she just transferred here from Chicago,” Cody went on. “Kind of convenient, huh? That would explain why nobody here ever saw her before. I think there’s just too much evidence against her. At least too much for me to be comfortable with her around—”
Jake grabbed Cody by his shirt and slammed him up against a row of lockers. Not hard enough to hurt him—Cody was nearly as big as he was, and Jake wasn’t that strong—but it made a huge clanging noise that had every student in the hallway look up in surprise.
“Don’t just ignore me because you don’t want to hear this,” Cody said. There was fear in his eyes but he couldn’t seem to stop.
“I’m going to ignore it because if I don’t, I’ll have one less friend,” Jake told him. “You’re talking about Megan, Cody. They were going to let her burn to death in a crashed car. Just to get my attention. When I wanted nothing more in the world than to ask her on a date, but I couldn’t, because I was too scared, she was the one who walked me through the process. Now, when I find out that I’m not even human, or whatever, the only thing in the world I want is somebody to hold me, and kiss me, and tell me it isn’t true. That I’m normal and that there’s nothing wrong with what I am. But I can’t have that. Oh, no. Because you decided that she wasn’t right for me.”
“She’s suspect,” Cody said, his voice very small.
“She’s the girl I love,” Jake replied, surprising even himself.
He’d never used that word before, not even when he was thinking about her. Not even when he was alone at night in bed, thinking about her.
Jake’s rage swelled up suddenly and he couldn’t take it any more. He punched the locker right next to Cody’s face, hard enough to hurt his hand. More than hard enough to make Cody flinch. Then he stalked off, pushing his way through the crowded hallway, not looking at anyone. If he ran into the fat kid who always wore black t-shirts, the kid was in trouble, he thought. Even if the kid had been right in front of him, though, jeering and mocking, Jake wouldn’t have seen him. He couldn’t see anything. It was like he was blind.
“Sleep,” the public address system said.
Jake kept stomping forward, even as dozens of bodies all around him fell lifeless to the ground. He stepped over a freshman girl in a hoodie, then walked around a pile of football players wearing their jerseys. He only stopped when he felt a buzzing presence in front of him, a weird, electronic vibration.
He looked up and saw himself. He looked pissed. It took him a while to understand he was staring into the mask of a Proctor.
“Hello, Jake,” the Proctor said. “Are you ready for your next test?”
“Sure,” Jake told him. “Why the hell not?”
Chapter Thirty-Six
The Proctor led him into the gym. Jake’s shoes squeaked on the blonde wood boards, but the Proctor made no sound at all. In the middle of the gym floor, where a black line had been painted right down the middle of the basketball court, twelve red dodegballs sat arranged in a perfect circle. Jake walked over to one and picked it up. Its rubbery smell made him remember all the painful times he’d had one of these slammed into his body by a sadistic lacrosse player. The gym was not his favorite place.
“Each ball weighs exactly six ounces,” the Proctor told him, droning on in that dispassionate electronic voice they all shared. “Except for one, which—”
“Who are you?” Jake asked. “I know you’re one of the teachers. Is that you, Mr. Dzama? Or maybe it’s Ms. Holman in disguise.”
The Proctor waited for him to finish. Of course it wasn’t going to answer. They were given specific questions they could answer, specific scripts they could deliver to explain the tests, and that was all they ever said. Mr. Irwin had said that when he put the mask on all emotional distractions went away. He wondered if that was just a psychological effect or if the mask had some real ability to deaden emotions.
He could really have used something like that.
“Except for one,” the Proctor said, “which weighs six and one half ounces. You may pick them all up and examine them if you please, but we have determined you will not be able to tell which ball is heavier by feel alone. Do you wish to examine the balls?”
Oh, what Cody could have done with a line like that. Cody. Who had betrayed Jake when he needed him the most.
Jake closed his eyes. He couldn’t afford this, right now. He needed to focus, needed to pay attention. Too many distractions! “No, I’ll take your word for it,” he said. Which was probably a mistake. He knew how tricky Proctors could be.
“To pass this test,” the Proctor told him, “you must identify which ball weighs seven ounces. You may weigh the balls in any manner you please. However, you may weigh them only three times. Weighing a fourth time will result in—”
“—An automatic failure condition? Seriously? You’re going to kill me just because I weighed some balls too many times?”
“You may begin now. I will observe but may not assist you in any way, nor may I answer any further questions.”
Jake stared at the silver mask. He wanted to hurl the ball in his hand at it hard enough to crack it. He wanted to pelt the Proctor with so many dodgeballs it would beg for mercy.
But that wouldn’t accomplish anything.
Fine. He had to weigh some balls. He looked around for a scale, assuming one would be provided. The gym was empty, however. There weren’t even any mats on the walls. Well, Jake knew there was a scale in the boys’ locker room. The wrestlers weighed themselves on it obsessively. He strode over to the door leading to the locker room—and found that it wouldn’t open.
He glanced back at the Proctor, wanting to know what it was up to, but of course it had already said it wouldn’t answer any questions. He tried the door to the girls’ locker room. A place every teenage boy wanted to break into, right? But that door was also locked. So was the door he’d entered the gym through, and the doors leading out to the athletic fields. Only one door was open, and it was a dead end—it led to the equipment room, where all the medicine balls and baseball bats and field hockey pads were stored. There was no way out through that room, not even a window, and—
Ah.
Jake got it, then. He didn’t just have to weigh the balls. He had to build a scale, too. He could use anything in the equipment room to that end.
“Pretty sneaky,” he called, talking to the Proctor because it was the only person around and he was too agitated not to talk to somebody. He leaned out through the door of the equipment room and looked at the Proctor. “Hey, are you Ms. Delessandro?”
The Proctor didn’t flinch, or even turn its masked head. He hadn’t really expected it to.
“I’m just assuming you’re a teacher,” he said, scanning the racks of volleyball nets and catcher’s mits. “For all I know, you’re the captain of the cheerleading squad. Or maybe you’re Megan. Cody thinks Megan’s a spy. Maybe she dresses up like a Proctor when she wants to feel tough.” He pulled down a cardboard box off a high shelf and found it was full of bowling pins. Useless. “Of course, Cody’s full of it. Isn’t that right? I know she’s not in on this. She can’t be.”
She couldn’t. She just… couldn’t.
But when the PA said sleep, she didn’t fall asleep.
It seemed awfully convenient, too, that when Jake had decided to convince her he was telling the truth, Mr. Zuraw had improvised a test on the spot that would not only convince her but make him think she’d saved him from certain death.
No. No, no, no! Jake refused to think like that.
Anyway, he had to concentrate on the test. He couldn’t afford a FAIL. He only had one free FAIL left. If he failed this test and another one, he would be shot dead.
“Okay,” he said, to himself this time. “Think! Think scales.”
Eventually he emerged from the equipment room with a variety of objects. He had a ten foot long pole, used for pole vaulting. He had a couple of jump ropes, and a couple of mesh bags that had been used to hold soccer balls. He went back and made a second trip to push out a stack of hurdles, several dozen of them it looked like.
This might work, he thought. If he got it just right.
First he had to find the balance point of the pole. He set up a hurdle in the middle of the gym. It came to just below waist height. He laid the pole perpendicularly across the top bar of the hurdle. It immediately started to fall off, of course. Carefully he slid it back and forth until it was balanced perfectly, tipping slightly one way, then the other, but not falling off the hurdle. He tied the jump ropes around the balance point, careful not to let the pole slide in either direction even a fraction of an inch. The balance had to be perfect or this just wouldn’t work.
Then he hung an empty mesh bag from either end of the pole. He could put as many dodgeballs as he liked in either one—the bags would easily hold all twelve balls. The problem was they sagged across the floor. The hurdle just wasn’t high enough.
The hurdles weren’t very sturdy. As a safety feature they were designed to come apart if you hit them the wrong way. They wouldn’t hold much weight, but the pole was hollow aluminum and not very heavy, and the dodgeballs were pretty light, too. Carefully, taking his time as best he could, he built a scaffold out of the hurdles, stacking them crosswise to give them as much structural integrity as possible. Finally, reaching up on tiptoe, he lifted his hurdle/pole/bags contraption to the top and let it fall into place.
When he was done he had a balance scale about six feet high. The mesh bags were still almost touching the ground, but that was okay—they just had to be suspended a few inches off the floor. The pole wobbled back and forth but eventually settled down until it was as level as it was going to get. He was ready to weigh the dodgeballs.
There was only one problem: it seemed impossible to weigh twelve balls with only three measurements. He just couldn’t see how it would be done.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Jake watched the Proctor but it didn’t move. It didn’t even shift from one foot to the other. He had no reason to expect it to—they were like robots when they wore the masks. Yet this one made a convenient target for his anger and he found himself trying to provoke it again and again.
“The way I heart it, Mr. Zuraw’s becoming unstable. You ask me—he’s royally messed up. Crazy. Maybe the Youth Steering Committee will have to replace him, huh? You got any opinion on that? No, I guess not.”
Jake studied the makeshift balance scale before him. It would work, he thought. He had to believe it would work. There was no way to test it—that would count as one of his three weighings, and he definitely couldn’t afford to waste even one.
He had to figure out which of the twelve dodgeballs weighed seven ounces, when the rest of them weighed six. His first thought had been pretty simple: break up the twelve into two groups of six each, then weigh the two groups against each other. One group would weigh thirty-six ounces total, and one would weigh thirty-seven. It would be enough to tip the scales, and that would eliminate half the balls right away. Then with his second weighing he could take the heavier group of six and split it into two groups of three, and weigh those groups against each other.
Which left him with three dodgeballs, and only one measurement left. It wasn’t enough. “Goddamnit!” he yelled. “Can’t you idiots ever make one of these tests make sense? Can’t it just work the first time?”
But no, of course not. That wasn’t the point. You had to use lateral thinking to solve these tests. You had to see what everyone else would miss.
Jake studied the dodgeballs carefully. He picked up a pair of them and tried to sense if one was heavier than the other. He was so keyed up he didn’t think he’d be able to tell, even if one weighed twice what the other did—they were both so light and they tried to roll out of his slippery hands.