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The kid looks alarmed and holds the walkie-talkie away
from his body like whoever it is can see him through the
speaker.
“I take it that’s not your boss,” I say.
He shakes his head and puts the radio back in his pocket.
Of course it’s Hodges. Her voice is a razor blade covered
in nectar. I know this, but I don’t want to tell him. I won’t
be saying anything more to this kid until he’s willing to
trade more information with me.
“Why does she have your boss’s radio?” I ask.
“I don’t know, but I have to go. Now.”
Like that hadn’t occurred to me.
“How about you just tell me where I am,” I say. “Tell
me where the nearest highway is and point me in the right
direction. That’s all I need.”
He snorts once. “That’s all you need? One, you’re
assuming I even know that. Which I don’t. If I didn’t have
this thing”—he pulls out a small, handheld GPS and shakes
it in front of my face—“I couldn’t find my own zipper.
Two, even if you did know where you were going and had
the right clothing and a snowmobile—which obviously
you don’t—you’re not going to get anywhere in this freak
of a storm.”
“How did you get here?”
“How I got here is not relevant. Look, time is short. I
really can’t help you. I’m not even sure I can help myself.
I’m sorry.”
“Where is this yurt thing you were talking about? Can I
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just follow you there? Just for a little while? You don’t have
to help me after that. I need to get away from here . . . from
them.”
“Why?”
“What do you mean, why?”
“Look, those military guys inside are after someone.
Some personal vendetta or something. I can’t believe 8-Bit
got involved with this. I don’t care if it was a personal favor.
I’m telling you, if you just lie low, they’ll clear out eventu-
ally. They’re not interested in you.”
“No? Then why are they trying to kill me?”
“They’re trying to kill you? You?” He looks me up and
down, and for a moment, his eyes settle on my bare head.
“Yes.”
He presses his lips together and says nothing for a few
seconds. Then he points at my head. “You’ve got some
dried blood. There. Above your left eye. And on your
neck.”
I lick my thumb and wipe the blood off my forehead.
I’m not sure who this blood belongs to. I think of the
woman who’s probably still lying in the lobby right now.
She’s gone from being a person to being a thing. So have
Steve and the coma kid. The horror of it, the unrealness
of it, hits me like a wave of nausea. For all I know, Larry
is also dead.
And Jori.
My face burns white-hot when I think about the way
I ran out on her. The way I completely forgot about her.
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I wipe my nose and eyes with the back of my hand. I
don’t even realize I’ve let go of the nailer until I hear it hit
the floor.
“I don’t know what to do or where to go.”
I’m half convinced that I’ve only said this to myself,
but then I realize he heard me, because when I raise my
head, I catch him looking at me. I can’t tell if his expres-
sion shows pity or something far deeper. Something more
like empathy.
His shoulders drop in resignation.
“Okay, fine. You can come with me for now. Maybe
wait the storm out. But after that you’re on your own. And
we might not even make it. We might end up frozen in the
woods.”
I pick up the nailer and stick it in the inside pocket of
my coat. “I’d rather freeze to death than get shot.”
“That’s the spirit,” he says as he checks his watch again.
After a minute, he closes his eyes and says quietly, “Where
are you, man?”
“Are you waiting for someone?”
“I was. But now I’ve got to leave without him.”
“Who?”
The kid kicks the mutilated body of his laptop across the
floor and says, “Somebody who’s going to be very annoyed
when he finds out what you did to his twenty-thousand-
dollar computer.”
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CHAPTER 7
e go back outside and stay close to the walls of the
Wmainframe building. The snow is coming down so
thick and fast that it builds up on the tops of our boots
each time we stop to check if it’s safe to move forward.
I’ve never been this far from the main building. Now
that I’m closer to the fence line, I can see that this place is
a fortress, just like the kid said. There’s a twelve-foot-high
fence with razor wire on the top. If there are roads leading
here, I can’t see them. This compound is an island set in the
middle of a sea of mountains.
I see a snowmobile with a sledge tied to the back. The
kid points to it. “That’s mine.”
“We can’t take it—they’ll hear us.” I don’t have to trans-
late that what I really mean is, They’ll shoot us.
“I need to get some stuff from out of there. Come on.”
He starts to run and I follow. We reach the snowmobile
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and kneel behind it. The kid reaches under the tarp cover-
ing the sledge and pulls out a pair of rain ponchos, except
they’re white. A moment later he takes his GPS out of his
pocket and hands it to me.
“You know how to use that?”
“I might. Give me a second.”
This is an effect of the tabula rasa treatment. Sometimes
we don’t know what we can do until we do it. Something
inside us takes over and suddenly we can paint or draw or
read another language. Or in my case, climb the gym walls
like they’re nothing. Like I knew that being up high was
where I belonged.
The GPS sits in my hand; I wait to see if I know what to
do with it, but I guess I’m too slow. He takes it back from
me and says, “It’s okay if you don’t. I’m surprised you’d
remember how to use a light switch with all the holes you
have in your head. I counted five of them, by the way.”
“Five of what?”
“Holes in your head. Not including the metal studs in
your skull for the halo.”
How does he know about that?
I guess he heard me thinking this—or maybe he noticed
that I jumped when he said it.
“I know a little about what goes on here. To be honest,
there are days I’m half-tempted to check myself in.”
“I don’t think they take people like you.”
“People like me? Who are ‘people like me’?”
“You just don’t seem to be as . . . you don’t seem the
type, is all.”
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“You don’t know what type I am,” he says darkly. He
pulls a white poncho over his head and hands one to me.
“What’s your name?” I ask.
He hesitates for a short, telling moment. “Pierce.”
“Pierce what?”
“Pierce Belmont.”
“Pierce Belmont?”
“That’s right.”
“That’s obviously a fake name.”
“No, it’s . . . not.”
“Whatever. Don’t tell me.”
We stay low as we head for the fence. Pierce takes out
the bolt cutters he’d used inside. I put my hand on his arm
before he can use them.
“What?”
A thought rushes at me suddenly, warningly, out of
nowhere. “It might be electrified.”
“Oh. You’re right. I could have just fried myself.”
He reaches into his pack and pulls out what looks like
a small pair of scissors. The cutting end is shiny like black
glass.
“Nonconductive,” he says. “Thanks for the heads-up.
You’re already earning your keep.”
Once we are both through, he takes a plastic zip-tie out
of his pocket and ties the fence flap back in place.
“From a distance they won’t be able to tell where we
went through. Might buy us a little time.”
I’m suddenly annoyed. “Don’t you want to know my
name?”
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He puts the tool back in his pack and says, “Do you
even know what your real name is?”
“Sarah?”
He looks at me skeptically. “You sure about that?”
I open my mouth to respond but find I really don’t have
anything to say.
The woods are black and white. White from the snow
coming down, black from night falling. We’d be walking
in circles if not for the GPS.
By the time we get a few hundred yards into the woods,
every step takes a huge amount of effort. The wind has
blown the snow into drifts in places, and as we cross them,
I sink up to the middle of my thighs. The cold has numbed
my legs, and I’m only walking from memory, one foot in
front of the other, over and over again.
Just as I’m about to tell Pierce that I’m done, I can’t walk
any farther, he looks at the GPS and says, “We’ve only got
twenty more yards to go.”
There could be a herd of elephants twenty yards ahead;
I can’t see more than a foot in front of my face. We walk
another few steps and suddenly a small tent appears, as if
Pierce waved a magic wand to summon it.
“So this is a yurt,” I say.
It’s a round structure, maybe fifteen feet wide. It looks
like a miniature circus tent with a satellite dish on the top
of the center pole.
“8-Bit got it from some guy he knew who quit the
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Russian intelligence service. He was selling all his equip-
ment off. The Russians will sell you anything. Secrets,
guns, kidneys, their children. Anything.” He grabs the flap
of the tent and flips it over to show me the layer of fur on
the other side. “That’s reindeer hide.”
He pushes the flaps back. “There’s only room for one
person at a time in the doorway. You’ll see. Take your
boots off and turn the lantern on when you go inside. It’s
hanging next to the inner door.”
He holds the flap back enough for me to duck inside,
into a small foyer kind of thing. I guess it was designed so
you could take off your coat and boots without letting the
cold air into the tent. Yurt. Whatever it’s called.
I’m not sure if I should take my coat off, but then I feel
warm air leaking from the inner chamber, so I figure it
must be all right. My socks come off with my snow-packed
boots. It’s so cold the snow hasn’t melted, even though it
was pressed against my feet.
I push the inner flap back and go inside. I find the lan-
tern and flick it on.
In the middle of the ceiling is an opening about two
feet wide and, below that, what looks like a small cauldron
with a perforated top. Something inside the cauldron is
glowing orange—the last embers of some weird fire that’s
just about gone out.
There are two inflatable mattresses, a couple portable
chairs, and a folding table with three large laptops the size
of briefcases on it. Next to each mattress is a big, bulging
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backpack. I also see a portable camping stove near the table
and some dirty plates with utensils stuck to them.
“Welcome to Hackville,” Pierce says as he pushes the
inner flap up and enters. “You won’t be staying long enough
to enjoy the amenities, which is just as well, because there
are no amenities.”
I stand in the center of the yurt, not sure what to do
with myself. After a minute he smiles and points. “That
right there is known as a chair. You sit on it. A lot of people
find them quite handy.”
“Thanks for the guidance.”
I plunk myself down while he turns on all three com-
puters. As he takes his hat and jacket off, he draws himself
up to his full height. His head nearly touches the top of the
yurt.
“This place makes my hospital room look huge by com-
parison. I hope your boss doesn’t snore.”
“As a matter of fact, he does.”
“He’s paying you extra for putting up with that, right?”
Pierce uses some bottled water to fill a small kettle and
then lights a propane stove beneath it. “I’m not getting
paid anything,” he says, running his fingers through his
hat-flattened hair. “Well, I get room and board, I suppose.
8-Bit is my father.”
“Oh. Why didn’t you just say that to begin with?”
“I’m not used to saying it yet. I only met the guy eight
months ago.” Pierce pauses a second and then says, “He
doesn’t want anyone to know.”
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“That he’s your father or that you’re his son?”
“What’s the difference?”
“There’s a difference, depending on who’s ashamed of
who.”
He snorts. “I hadn’t thought of that before, but I guess
you’re right.”
He sits down in the computer chair. We’re maybe three
feet apart. I sneak a look at him while he’s fiddling with
one of the laptops. I’ve been in that hospital for who knows
how long, and I can’t remember the last time I saw a boy
who wasn’t bald with holes in his head.
Pierce catches me looking at him and smiles. My cheeks
suddenly feel like they’re a hundred degrees warmer than
the rest of me. “Sorry. Didn’t mean to stare.”
“That’s okay.” He gives me a cocky grin. “I get that a
lot.”
He puts his ski hat back on and raises his eyebrows at
me.
“Going somewhere?”
He points at my hat. “Didn’t want you to feel all alone.”
I touch the acrylic cap, which, now that it’s wet from
sweat and melted snow, is very itchy. I take it off, but once
I do, I feel naked in front of him.
“So,” I say. “What were you doing up there, to the
computer system?”
He shrugs.
“What did you do to end up in that head lab back
there?”
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I shrug.
“What did they tell you?” he asks.
“Not much. Telling me why I was there would sort of
defeat the purpose of erasing my memory.”
“They had to have told you something.”
“Just that my parents are both dead, and that I have
PTSD. Like everyone else there. I guess we couldn’t get
over whatever it was, so we needed help forgetting.”
“Help? You don’t seem like you need help with any-
thing.”
“What does that mean?”
“I mean, those treatments don’t change your personal-
ity.”
“How do you know?”
“I told you. I’ve done a little reading about what they do
here. Point is, PTSD or not, you are who you are.”
“Which means what?”
“Which means—how can I put this? You and your
nailer don’t seem like the kind who’d have trouble dealing
with anybody’s hurt feelings, including your own.”
His words hit me hard. All I’ve feared, all I’ve sus-
pected . . . could it be that obvious? Even to this stranger?
Maybe that’s what I really am.
Perpetrator.
I look up, expecting him to be disgusted by me, but
instead I see a flicker of . . . not sympathy. Understanding,
maybe? It’s strange.
He stands up and moves toward me. I spring to my feet,
slightly crouched, my hands already hardened into fists.
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“Hey, relax, will you?”
“Sorry. I’m not very good at relaxing.”
He pulls something out of his jacket pocket, and now
I see what it is: a flash drive. “I need to do a few things.”
He takes me by the shoulders and moves me over slightly
so he can skirt past. “This may take a while. Feel free to lie
down and rest.”
“I don’t want to lie down,” I say, even though all I want
to do is lie down.
“Okay, tough girl. You can stare at the wall if you pre-
fer. But you look exhausted.”
He rolls his eyes a little, like he’s known me forever and
this is just the kind of thing I’m always doing, forever put-
ting up a brave front. It makes me feel a little better about
him. And about myself, too. The nurses were always so
cautious and wary around me, but he’s not. Even after I
punched him in the face. And shot his computer with a nail
gun. I’m very relieved to imagine that I might be whatever
he thinks I am. Being plain old all right would be a huge
step up for me.
Pierce sits down at one of the computers and takes out
his heinous, thick-framed glasses. He hesitates a moment
before putting them on.
“They’re really, you know, not that . . . bad,” I say.
“Don’t patronize me.”
“You’re right. They’re completely hideous.”
He begins tapping away. I can tell that even if I ask
him a question, he won’t answer, because he won’t even
hear me. Whatever he’s doing, though, it’s clear that it’s not
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