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Authors: Claire Merle

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BOOK: The Glimpse
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Nick drove, but with Dombrant watching her every move, Ana barely said two words to the chauffeur who’d been strangely absent since her return home.

The Taurel housekeeper showed Ana into the hal and scurried up the left side of the elegant double staircase to fetch Jasper’s mother. Lucy came down at once. She hugged Ana and stroked her short hair, clearly distraught at the sight of it. As Ana stood in Lucy’s grasp, she remembered the last time she’d been there. New Year’s Eve. Jasper had presented her with their official binding card; just after midnight he’d kissed her on the lips outside by the pool.

‘Come,’ Lucy said, sniffing. ‘He’l be so pleased to see you.’ She drew Ana into the vast taupe and grey kitchen.

Jasper slouched in a window-seat alcove at the far end.

He rose when he saw Ana and reminiscent of his old, faultless etiquette, offered her something to drink.

‘Mother?’ he said, once he’d fetched them both freshly 350

squeezed lemonade from a jug in the fridge. Lucy stuttered an apology and edged out of the kitchen.

Ana and Jasper stood face to face without speaking. A crisp white shirt and shampooed hair did much to restore his old semblance of togetherness. But Ana noticed his hands shook and dark eyes haunted his face. ‘My mother explained everything,’ he said. ‘I know who you are.’

are.’

She flung her arms around him and began to cry. He stiffened in her hold. She hugged him tightly, then forced herself to let go.

He had absolutely no idea who she was.

‘Please,’ he said gesturing to the window seat, embarrassed. She perched on the edge of the taupe cushion. At least he seemed a little more with it than he’d been in the loony dump.

He sat down beside her. ‘The doctors say the memory loss should be short term.’

‘I was there with you, Jasper. Don’t you remember anything?’

A muscle beneath his eye began to twitch. He grimaced.

‘The doctors advised my parents not to let me see you before the joining,’ he said. His voice held the edge of a threat. Tiny needles of dread prickled up Ana’s spine.

She wondered if he’d received some sort of reprogramming so that he wouldn’t even
want
to recal everything that had happened.

‘Why would they do that?’ she asked.

‘They said you were finding it hard to adjust back. That to buffer yourself from the truth, you’ve concocted a fantasy around your abduction.’

351

Ana’s internal temperature seemed to drop; her blood crystalised. She’d come to clear her conscience, to crystalised. She’d come to clear her conscience, to assure herself he would be OK when she left the Community. A part of her had been hoping he would escape with her to the Project. Or that she would at least be able to question him about Tom’s evidence – whether he’d ever looked at it, whether he’d managed to hide the disc somewhere. But her father and whoever else was involved in this charade, had pre-empted anything like that by ensuring Jasper didn’t even trust her.

She had to find a back door into his mind; something to make him question the story they’d fed him.

‘What’s the last thing you remember?’ she asked.

‘I don’t know.’

‘Do you remember your brother?’

He reeled back from her and snorted. ‘Of course I do.’

‘How did he die?’

Jasper lowered and cracked his knuckles. ‘Why are you trying to make things worse for us?’

‘Because the truth mattered to you.’ She swalowed hard.

‘That’s why we’re here like this now. You were prepared to do anything for the truth.’

‘Stop it,’ he said.

‘If you don’t trust me, why would you want to join with me?’

He winced as though her words stung. His mouth twisted in an ugly grimace.

‘You and I are the same,’ he said. ‘We’re both damaged now. We belong together whether we like it, or not.’

Ana’s chest felt as though it was in a vice and the vice 352

was tightening. At least in Three Mils he was stil fighting, even if he couldn’t tel who the enemy was. This man before her had been clamped down, his wings clipped.

‘But you want to cal off the joining, don’t you?’ she asked.

‘I’m a man of my word.’

She leant forward, searching his eyes for a shard of the Jasper who knew where they’d been.

‘I was with you,’ she whispered.

His mouth puckered. His gaze hardened. He obviously wouldn’t believe anything she had to say about their

‘kidnappings’.

‘Try to remember. Try to remember what happened to Tom.’

Jasper rose. ‘I’m a man of my word,’ he repeated. ‘I’l see you at the joining.’ He stalked from the kitchen with an uneven gait. As he receded to the staircase opposite the main entrance, his head hunched into his shoulders and he began to lumber.

*

*

Ana spent the afternoon playing the piano she would soon leave behind. She’d reconstructed the melody for

‘Second Sight’ and now her soul twisted around Cole’s music, fused with it, until it was a part of her. Sadness and hope expanded inside her. She couldn’t wait any longer. Somehow, tonight, she would make it over the wal and find Cole.

Somehow she would make things right again for Jasper and Tamsin. She had to.

Behind her, the French window leading out to the ter-353

race clicked open. She jumped up in alarm and spun around. She blinked at a slim, agitated figure, bleary in the day’s brightness.

‘Nate?’ she gasped. The astonishment in her voice was only marginaly greater than the terror and excitement.

Nate’s eyes gobbled up the open-planned living area, the low bookshelves, the photographs and paintings, the sofas around the glass coffee table, and finaly the baby grand on the raised platform where Ana stood trembling.

‘Nate!’ she cried. She leapt the four-foot gap towards him. ‘How did you get here? What are you doing here?

How did you get past the checkpoint and the Warden?’

She reached out to embrace him, but he leant away, glancing shiftily over his shoulder.

Adrenalin tore through her blood as though it would cleave her open. Something awful must have happened for him to risk coming to see her.

for him to risk coming to see her.

‘Is Cole OK?’

He folded his arms across his chest. ‘You gotta stop looking for him.’

‘But he’s OK?’

‘Everywhere you go – Camden, Forest Hil – the Wardens are folowing you. They’re practicaly living with you.

Don’t you get it? You’re putting us al in danger.’

‘I’m sorry. I’m sorry, Nate, realy, but I have to speak to him. Please, tel him for me. I have to see him.’

Nate smouldered. She knew he despised her because she was the daughter of their enemy, because she lived like a Pure, because she’d brought the Wardens into their lives and driven them from their homes. She didn’t blame him.

354

In fact, despite this, she felt enormously grateful – he was here.

‘Cole’s gone,’ Nate said.

‘Gone? What do you mean?’

‘He wanted me to give you this and to say goodbye for him.’ Nate chucked a coin-sized disc at the sofa.

‘Gone where?’

He shrugged. ‘Abroad.’

‘How? Where? For how long?’ The questions tripped over each other, each desperate to be answered.

Nate’s gaze fixed on her with a look of pure hate.

‘Just accept it,’ he said. ‘You’ve done enough damage.

Cole wouldn’t have been so pig-headed if it weren’t for you and that rubbish about a Glimpse. That minister Peter Reed was a total liability. But Cole was trying to be a hero.

Trying to impress you.’

‘Impress me?’ she echoed. Lila’s words in the bathroom at Forest Hil came hurtling back.
He knew the time of
the
Glimpse was catching up with him. He split up
with Rachel and
took on more assignments because
he knew you had something to
do with disproving the
Pure tests.

‘Please,’ she said. ‘Please. I need some way of contacting him. An address. Someone he’s staying with.

He’l be in touch with Lila, I’m sure of it. And when he does she can tel him I need to speak to him, and—’

Nate shook his head.

‘What for? You’re joining Jasper Taurel. Why make it worse for him?’

Ana turned her lips into her mouth and squeezed, trying to delay the tears.

355

355

‘It’s not—’ She felt helpless. Nate wouldn’t believe her if she told him she had no intention of going through with the joining. That she was a prisoner here, waiting for a chance to escape.

‘How did you get into the Community?’ she asked. ‘Did you come over the wal? I want to go back with you.’

Nate’s look was solid and unforgiving. ‘Cole won’t be in touch,’ he said. ‘Lila’s gone with him. For good.’

‘No—’ Ana felt the hope she’d been clinging to for days, slip away. ‘No, he wouldn’t have—’

‘Wel, perhaps he thought the same about you. Perhaps he thought you wouldn’t have come back here. But you did.’ Nate was sneering now. He stepped backwards through the French window. ‘He’s probably starving on some cargo ship halfway to America by now. Al thanks to you.’

Grief puled Ana down. She sank to her knees, felt her ribs crush together as she flopped against the wooden floor.

The room spun. Something cold and hard pressed into her cheek. Her body throbbed with a dul, distant pain.

It was over. Jasper distrusted her and thought she was delusional, and Cole was gone. The only things that had kept walking through the white, barren haze, when al she’d wanted to do was lie down and let the mist claim her, had been taken away.

356

356

30

The Joining

Time passed. Irrelevant. Meaningless. Just light inching across a wal as the world rotated away from the sun.

Day roled into night, night into day – the aftermath of a cloud of gas and dust colapsing under its own gravity bilions of years ago, setting the world spinning.

*

A loud rap shook Ana’s bedroom door. She jerked. She must have drifted off because she was standing in front of her bathroom mirror, tap running, a large blob of foundation cupped in her hand which she didn’t remember squeezing out. Cole’s music played on her interface. Her father had given her a spare one three days ago, with the net access disconnected. Ever since, she’d been living and breathing Cole’s fusion music. The rhythms of her body felt as though they’d gradualy altered, synchronising themselves with the pulses and vibrations of melodies that made her crave and pine for him.

‘Ariana,’ a voice caled. A female voice she vaguely knew.

She looked up at her reflection and winced. An unnatural tan colour streaked her face. Her eyes were bloodshot, glazed. She looked sick. She looked like an Active Big3.

357

Hurriedly, she wiped off the make-up with a hand towel.

Hurriedly, she wiped off the make-up with a hand towel.

A fist pounded on the door. ‘Hon, open up,’ the voice shouted. ‘Your dad asked me to come over. Let me in.’

‘Lake?’

‘Yeah, it’s me. Move it, before your dad gets his axe out and hacks his way in here.’

Ana stumbled across her room, tripping over plates with mouldy food and dodging a mound of dumped washing.

She turned the key. The door opened then wedged on a half-eaten box of cornflakes. Lake forced her way through, crushing cereal underfoot.

‘Blimey,’ she said, shoving the door closed. ‘Your dad wasn’t joking. It’s like the East Coast war zone in here.’

Her eyes turned to take in Ana. ‘Holy . . . Jeez . . .

Shite.’

Ana bristled defensively, but then she remembered her own shock at seeing herself in the mirror. She glanced down and realised she was stil in the leggings and T-shirt she’d been wearing five days ago when she’d spoken to Nate. That couldn’t be helping.

‘Wel this little baby is gonna be about as much good as patching up a stab wound with a plaster,’ Lake said, puling a blonde wig from her handbag and chucking it at the rubbish bin. She kicked aside a trail of clothes strewn in front of the bed and began pacing. She dug out a lighter and cigarettes from her giant handbag.

‘What you listening to?’

Ana shrugged.

Ana shrugged.

‘Do you mind?’ Lake asked, lighting up.

Ana turned away.

358

‘So,’ Lake said, exhaling a ring of smoke, ‘you’re getting joined in three days.’

‘Not if I can help it,’ Ana said, flopping face down on to her bed.

‘Wel, that’s not what your dad’s saying. Either way, tomorrow you have to go down to Hampstead Community Hal and make your official declaration.

There’l be photographers and reporters around, eager for the first images of Ashby Barber’s abducted daughter. You go looking like that and the Board wil have you declared Active before you’ve got home.’ She puffed on her cigarette, bit her nails, flicked her lighter over and over.

‘Dad’l send a stand-in. He’d do it for the joining too if he could, but I guess Jasper might not join a girl wearing a coat over her head.’

‘Look, I don’t know what’s realy going on here. I don’t think you should tel me. Not if it might get you or Jasper in trouble with the Wardens or the Board. But you’ve got a decision to make. If you’re going to go through with joining Jasper in three days’ time, as your dad seems to think you wil, you’l have to face the Board and the media. You might have had a taste of what’s waiting for you from when it came out about your messed-up Pure test, but this is gonna be ten times worse. Everyone test, but this is gonna be ten times worse. Everyone wants to know about the kidnapping, how you escaped, how Jasper escaped, what the kidnappers wanted you for. You and Jasper are huge news now, Ariana. And the Board wil be watching your every move.’

Ana tried to muster up the energy to respond. ‘So let them watch,’ she sighed.

359

‘Wel, you’d better stop moping around is al I can say.

The Board would just love to declare you Active after the way you and Jasper have humiliated them. Is that what you want? You want the Board to win?’

Ana felt a stab of injustice. ‘This isn’t about the Board winning.’ And actualy, yes, she did hope they’d declare her Active. Preferably before the joining ceremony.

BOOK: The Glimpse
5.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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