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like an imaginary crowd is cheering him on. He jogs off
into the night. I get up but don’t bother to chase him down.
“Not to make excuses,” I say, “but I’m not sure how in
touch with reality he is. I mean, he clearly doesn’t realize
how much this all sucks.”
Thomas crawls a few feet, like he doesn’t want to get up
off the ground. I know the feeling. The front of his jacket
is torn, and the downy fill is spilling out. In his hand is a
black rectangle with two wrist straps attached to it. He
holds the small computer up, victorious.
“At least I got this.”
“But what is it?”
“Probably about a hundred million dollars in research
and development. Let’s go find out what it does.”
We retreat to the trailer. Thomas’s new toy has him
occupied, so he tells me to go ahead and use his laptop. The
trailer is once again freezing, and there’s not enough power
left to run the space heater. I can see my breath as I hunch
over and begin to read hungrily, wanting to know, afraid to
know. I go through page after page of reports and memos
on the Tabula Rasa project. The weirdest stuff is about
the side effects. This whole treatment is nothing but side
effects—and they’re all over the map. Every patient seemed
to display a different set of post-op behaviors—“extreme
lethargy and suicidal impulses” to “hyperaggressive dis-
plays paired with loss of impulse control and empathy.”
I know that this could be my fate if I don’t get that last
pill, but I don’t want to know any more about this clinical
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stuff. I switch over to a file labeled “Grants and Funding,”
thinking it might be fairly harmless. I find a series of emails
between Dr. Buckley and some guy at the National Insti-
tutes of Health. The first line of the first message I read
says, “Effective immediately . . . ”
“The government canceled the project!”
Thomas hardly responds. “Project canceled. Hold that
thought. I’ve just figured out that this tablet is connected
to their mainframe.”
“I thought you said you killed the mainframe.”
“I killed the hospital’s mainframe. But this awesome
little thing”—he shakes the tablet—“connects to these sol-
diers’ portable mainframe. This is the highest of high-end
stuff. Their portable mainframe can override every system
in this place.”
“How?”
“This thing blots out one signal and replaces it with a
stronger one. It can even override hardwired connections.
So these guys can basically come in and turn that sucker
on, and what was once your mainframe now becomes their
mainframe. But more importantly, what was once your
security system now becomes their security system.”
I get up and look over his shoulder. He points at a series
of red dots on the screen. All of which are moving.
“Look what we have here.”
“What are those?”
“This is a map of the compound, both inside and out.
Each dot is a soldier.”
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He scrolls through some pages, and I can see that some
of the dots are inside the building, and some are roaming
around outside. He brings up each floor of the hospital in
turn.
“Uggh,” he says.
“What?”
“I count thirteen armed dots.”
My heart sinks. “That’s a lot of armed dots.”
“Yeah, but this tells us something important. Wait. Look
at this.” Again he taps the screen, and this time I see the
wreckage in the main lobby. Snow has blown in through
the windows and collected in a drift near the front doors.
They’ve stacked a pile of bodies near the potted palms.
“You have access to the security cameras?”
“Indeed. Now let’s get back to finding those pills. I had
no luck figuring out where the med locker is. It’s not on the
map, anyway. Where do you think they’d keep something
super secret like that? I mean, do you remember someplace
inside that was off-limits?”
“Pretty much everywhere was off-limits.”
“But I mean, do you remember the staff ever talking
about certain floors of the building being special for any
reason?”
“The sixth floor,” I say automatically. “That’s where
Larry’s office was. I think that’s where all the doctors’
offices were. I once heard some of the nurses talking about
how you had to have special clearance to get in and out of
there.”
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“The sixth floor,” he repeats. “Okay. We’ll start there.
But first we’ve got to get back inside.”
“Wait. What does the fact that there are thirteen dots
tell us?”
“What?”
“You said that the number of guys they’ve brought tells
us something.”
“Oh, right. Well, one assumes these guys know what
they’re doing, and since 8-Bit helped case the joint elec-
tronically for them, they must have decided that all they
needed to raid this huge hospital was thirteen guys.”
“Fourteen,” I say.
“Oh, yeah. Right. They’re down a man thanks to Oscar.
Still, that’s not much fire power for a compound this big.”
“Maybe they knew that people would be clearing out
for the storm.”
“They didn’t. They knew a storm was coming, but I
don’t think anybody expected it to be this bad.”
“So that pretty much proves that there weren’t many of
us left in here.”
“Yeah, something strange is going on. This hospital is
pretty swank, considering it was about to become a ghost
town.”
He gets up and walks over to the little space heater. “No
point in conserving energy now.”
He turns it on full blast, and I let the warmth bathe me.
“What else was in the bag?” I ask.
“Lots of goodies. I don’t know what they all do, but
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I’m sure some of them blow things up.” He rubs his hands
together quickly, then says, “I’m going to do something
now. Trust me?”
“I’ll have to think about it.”
He hits a button, and I see on the screen that the alarm
system goes off in an area on the first floor. We watch on
the soldier’s computer as a bunch of red dots start moving
toward that area.
Thomas turns the alarm off.
Then he turns it back on.
He waits about thirty seconds and does it all again. We
wait another five minutes and suddenly the whole wing
goes dark.
“What just happened?” I ask.
He raises his finger and points at the soldier’s computer.
Slowly, the red dots begin moving back toward the main
lobby again.
“You made them think the system was glitching on and
off,” I say.
“Yep.”
“So they shut all the power off in that section because
the alarm was so annoying. Genius.”
“‘Annoying Genius.’ That should be my slogan from
now on.” He points at the screen. “We should head toward
this door. I think it’ll be open now, so we don’t have to
use a passcard to get in. Plus, if we trip any alarms, they’ll
assume it’s another problem with the security system.”
We start to pack up our things, but I pause. “Oscar.
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What should we do about him?”
“That nut-job is on his own as far as I’m concerned,
especially after that hilarious attempt to drop me to my
death.”
“He didn’t do it on purpose.”
“You’re defending him? He almost got you killed, too.”
“I know, but I was reading some of the other staff
reports about treatment effects. Oscar isn’t sure what’s real
and what’s just in his head.”
“Yeah. Well, I hope he gets over that sometime soon or
he’s gonna fantasize us all into a bloody pulp.”
The rumble of an engine makes us both turn toward
the door. “Maybe those snowcats are back,” Thomas says.
The sound gets louder and louder until it sounds like
it’s coming from right outside the trailer. Because it is. The
whole trailer is trembling. Headlights come on directly
outside the window, and we both freeze like deer waiting
to be shot.
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CHAPTER 18
homas grabs my hand and the tablet and dashes for
Tthe door, but we don’t make it more than a few steps
before the whole trailer starts rocking. We land on the
floor and slide toward one wall and then back again. The
furniture slides with us, including the heavy oak desk and
the pictures dangling from their wall hooks. I hear glass
cracking and metal twisting and a crunching sound that
I think is coming from the roof. Thomas manages to get
a hand on the laptop to keep it from sliding off the desk
just as the desk smacks into the wall, and I barely escape
being pinned by the leather sofa.
“Maybe my little security system trick didn’t work so
well after all,” he says, dodging the desk chair as it flies by.
The trailer tips upright again and remains still for a
moment. I crawl toward the window, expecting to see a
snowcat, but what I see instead is only slightly less troubling.
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Oscar is behind the controls of an excavator. He’s using the
digging arm to push the trailer, like he’s trying to knock it
off the blocks or whatever the whole thing is propped up
on.
I watch as he swings the arm as far as it will go to the
left. I have just enough time to scramble backward before
he uses the claw to rip the end of the trailer off like he’s
opening a cereal box.
“Come on!” I grab Thomas’s arm and pull him toward
the trailer door. “It’s Oscar!”
Just then, something crashes through the roof of the
trailer, smashing the desk to splinters. The computer flies
off the desk, and when it hits the floor, the screen snaps off.
“What does he think he’s doing?”
We roll into the opposite wall as the trailer tips so far
to the left I’m sure it’s going to fall onto its side. At least
we’d be falling toward solid ground. I guess this is not what
Oscar wants though, because he lets the trailer slam flat
upright again. I realize that he’s trying to push the whole
thing over and send it tumbling into that big hole in the
ground.
Just as I reach the door, Thomas pulls away from my
grasp. He stretches to retrieve the computer from where
it’s landed next to the mini-fridge. Through the opening
in the roof, I see Oscar winding up again to punch straight
down through the top of the trailer.
“Thomas, no!”
“I need the flash drive!”
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He flattens his body completely, just able to reach the
drive with his fingertips. With the other hand he grabs
the strap of the soldier’s backpack and pulls it toward him.
Oscar brings the arm of the excavator down. Inside my
mind, I’m screaming at Thomas to get back, but there’s
not even time for my lips to form the words. He’s trying
to get up but can’t get off his knees because the trailer has
collapsed and fallen off its supports. He’s sliding toward the
end that Oscar ripped away. Thomas isn’t going to make it
out. The digger claw is going to snap him in two.
I reach through the door and grab him by his jacket just
as the claw smashes what’s left of the ceiling. He screams in
pain, and at first I think he’s been crushed, but then I see
what’s happened. The claw missed Thomas, but pinched a
piece of metal from the roof against his lower leg. I have to
wait for Oscar to lift the digger claw up again before I can
try to get Thomas out.
Oscar struggles with the excavator’s control levers. A
moment later the arm swings upward, and I’m able to peel
back the piece of debris and pull Thomas out through the
door. We both land hard on the frozen ground and Thomas
howls. His boot has been slashed all the way through. The
cut runs from kneecap to ankle in almost a straight line
along his shinbone.
Oscar looks directly at me; his eyes are innocent. He
could be playing in a sandbox with a toy. He swings the
excavator’s arm up and brings it down again onto a porta-
john, smashing it flat. He laughs as the putrid slush in the
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porta-potty gushes onto the ground and runs downhill
toward the excavation pit.
I need a way to get Thomas out of here, because he
won’t be able to walk. I grab a plastic section of the porta-
potty and retrieve the rope we used earlier. After threading
it through the air vent at the top, I roll Thomas onto this
makeshift sled and pull him out of range of the claw. Every
bump makes him shriek in agony.
The storm is ferocious, and the wind slashes at my bare
head. In the scramble to get out of the trailer, I’ve lost my
hat, my gloves. We’ve lost Thomas’s backpack, though he
managed to hold on to the soldier’s pack. He’s clutching
the flash drive in his hand so tightly I think he might be
crushing it.
I’ve completely lost my bearings. I look up at the hos-
pital. It’s just a broad expanse of wall and rows of windows
too high to reach. We might as well be trying to break into
a prison.
“Thomas, where do we go?”
He points at a huge pile of dirt next to the construction
site.
“Other side of that?”
He nods.
Of course. There’s no way I’m going to get him up and
over this mound of dirt, but I start to climb anyway. Each
step I take, I use up all my strength, decide it’s pointless,
and then try one more time. I keep my eyes closed so I
don’t have to keep looking at how far I still have to go.
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After struggling up the hill for what seems like an hour,
I feel a blast of wind hit me full in the face. Opening my
eyes, I’m shocked to find that I’m at the top.
I pull as hard as I can, but I can’t get the sled up the
final few feet. “You’re going to have to climb the last bit,
Thomas. I’m sorry. Can you do it?”
He lifts his body just enough to let the sled beneath him
slide away. It quickly shoots to the bottom. I lie flat and he
uses my body like a ladder, pulling himself up until we’re
both sitting at the top. He bites down on his lip to keep
from screaming.
I look down toward the door and realize getting down
won’t be so easy. The dirt pile is right up against the build-
ing, and the angle of the incline is steeper than on the side
I just dragged Thomas up. I’m going to have to take him
down inch by inch, and if I lose my grip on him, he could
slide out of control, right into the wall.
We need to hurry. We’re in open view, and snowcat
headlights are now moving toward the trailer. Oscar seems
oblivious. He begins working the excavator’s arm up and
down, up and down. The claw plunges repeatedly into the
ground, right in the same spot, but the ground is so hard
he’s not making any progress. What is he doing?
Then I understand.
“I think he found Jori’s body, and he’s digging her a
grave,” I say.
Thomas raises his head and says, “I don’t care what that
nut-job is doing.”
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