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Improvising seems familiar. Like it’s my style.
I notice an interior door in the corner of the garage.
There’s probably a hallway on the other side. It might lead
toward a basement, but I can’t chance it. Since this place
is built into the side of a hill, I can’t be sure what level the
garage connects to, and I don’t want to end up anywhere
near the lobby. Run? Don’t run? I do nothing. I can’t do
nothing. I hear footsteps on the other side of the door.
Heavy and urgent. These guys are fast.
I can hear them shouting to each other in their weird,
digitized voices. I run to the other side of the garage where
the big lawn mowers are parked and squat down behind
one of them.
I hear the chirp of a magnetized card reader and see the
light near the door turn from red to green. The door opens
an inch.
I wait. They wait. They’re testing me.
“Sarah Ramos. Walk to the center of the room and
lie face down on the floor with your arms and legs fully
extended.”
I say nothing. Still the door doesn’t open. What are they
waiting for?
I jump up from behind the mower and pull the engine
cord. It springs to life, coughing black smoke and shak-
ing the room. I squeeze one handle, but nothing happens.
Then I try both at the same time and the lawn mower
jumps forward, but as soon as I let go of both handles, it
stalls.
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Behind me on a workbench is a roll of duct tape. I tear
a piece off with my teeth and wrap it around each handle
of the mower.
Just as the door springs open, I pop the brake and the
mower takes off toward the door. I don’t care how many
guns you have—when a huge lawn mower is coming at
you, you get out of the way. They reflexively shoot and
then retreat back to the hallway as it smashes into the door.
The screeching of metal echoes through the garage.
I hit the button to lower the garage door, waiting until
it’s almost all the way down before slipping out underneath
it.
I’m alive. But I need to keep moving if I want to stay
that way.
Keeping close to the building, I hope the outcroppings
and contours will provide me some cover. After a hundred
feet or so, I come to the edge of my known world: a huge
metal trellis mounted to the side of the building. It runs
almost all the way to the roof and has thousands of pieces of
copper foil attached to the lattice. When the wind blows,
the foil strips spin around, making patterns in the shift-
ing breezes. Pretty, yes, but it’s also capturing the wind’s
energy to help supply power to the building. Somebody
once told me it’s called “functional sculpture.”
As I try to decide what my next move should be, I see a
figure ahead of me in the snow. It isn’t one of the guys with
guns. It isn’t someone on staff. Another patient? It can’t be.
For one thing, he isn’t bald. I can see dark hair sticking out
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from underneath his ski hat. Also, he’s wearing a big white
puffy ski jacket and goggles, and carrying what looks like
a computer bag. As he skulks along, I skulk behind him.
Something in the way he moves tells me he’s young. I fol-
low as he picks his way around the edge of the building.
In his left hand, he’s carrying a walkie-talkie, and when
he disappears around the next corner, I run faster to gain
ground.
I chance a look around the corner and stop in my tracks.
There’s a work site. It’s huge. The hole they’ve dug for
this construction project runs as deep as the main hospital
building is tall. Excavated dirt is piled in every direction.
There are dump trucks, cement mixers, backhoes, and,
looming above it all, a tower crane. I see the trunk of it,
but the top has disappeared into the veil of snow. Obvi-
ously, they wouldn’t be working in this weather, but there’s
something about the site that’s not quite right. Maybe it’s
the tall weeds around the tires of the cement mixer, the
sheets of plastic that have torn loose and blown into the
fence, the way the piles of dirt have hardened. No one’s
been here for a while.
The kid is making his way toward the small outbuilding
that’s connected to the main facility by a glass walkway.
He’s crouched low, definitely trying to stay hidden. It
makes me feel better about him. Plus, he doesn’t have a
gun. Right now, my favorite people on earth are those
without guns.
When the kid gets to the building, he squats down near
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the door at the side and pulls out a passcard. It’s just like
mine: white. He seems unsure about whether he wants to
use it. He waits, then finally scans the card and opens the
door.
That’s when I make my move. I sprint for the opening
like I’m trying to steal home, catching the door with my
boot just before it closes all the way. I wait a minute before
looking inside, just in case the guy is still there. He isn’t.
I’ve clearly come in a back door or a side door. It’s kind
of odd, the way this place is separate from the main build-
ing, but I’m sure there must be a reason. There always is.
The stairs go one direction: down. I move as quietly as
I can. This might be a good place to lie low for a while. I
come to a set of doors, each with a magnetized card reader
next to it. Judging by the unmelted snow on the floor, the
kid went to the right. Guess I’ll go left.
I use my passcard and pull the door open. The air’s so
cold I wonder if I’ve walked back outside. As I enter the
room, the lights come on. I take two steps back, and the
security camera in the upper corner of the room adjusts
itself to capture my movement.
No! No! No!
Turning back, I hear a strange sound, like something
deflating. Someone has just turned off the lights, along with
every machine in the place—all that white noise you don’t
notice until it’s gone. A moment later, a series of greenish
emergency lights come on.
I hear the beep of the card reader. Someone is coming.
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I press myself against the wall. It must be the kid I saw
outside. Maybe he saw my snow tracks in the hall. I need
to think fast.
The door swings open all the way, letting in just enough
light so I can aim.
Apparently I know how to throw a pretty good punch.
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CHAPTER 6
he kid flies backward. His head hits the wall hard, but
Tthe thud is muffled by his ski hat. He slides down into
a sitting position as his computer bag spills onto the floor
next to him.
He looks up at me, amazed and slightly offended, and
then touches his bleeding nose. “What did you do that
for?”
My head tips to the side; my lips part. I look at my fist
because I’m pretty sure it’s never punched such a good-
looking face before. I can’t dwell on this fact for very long,
though, because for all I know, this boy could be helping
those killers hunt me down.
I put my boot on his ankle and press down with all my
weight.
“Hey! That hurts!”
“It’s supposed to,” I say. “Did you turn the lights out?”
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“Who are you?”
I growl at him. “All you need to know right now is that
I’m the girl with the gun.”
“That is not a gun.”
“A projectile is a projectile.”
“You got me there.”
I step back and he leans forward to rub his ankle. Then
he starts to get up and actually holds out his hand for me to
pull him to his feet.
“I didn’t say you could get up.”
“Just let me do what I was gonna do, all right?”
“Which is what?”
“Can’t tell you that, but if I don’t do it quick, a bunch
of angry dudes with real guns are going to come rushing
in here.”
I look around the room. The green glow of the emer-
gency lights has leached into the air like weak tea, but it
reveals nothing familiar. At least not to my eyes.
“What is this place?” I ask.
“It’s where they house the mainframe for this joint.”
He points toward the other side of the room. Now I
can see the outline of a series of small, rectangular towers.
They’re elevated off the floor behind a metal cage.
“Why would they have the computer so far from the
main building?”
“This system needs to be kept super cool all the time,
which is why this room is like a meat locker. And it needs
to be kept safe. So it’s in a bunker with four-foot-thick
walls. Does that satisfy your curiosity?”
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“Not really.”
“Please. I’m running out of time. What do you want?
You want me to beg?” He gets on his knees. “Here. I’m
begging. Happy now?”
“Ecstatic.”
He reaches for his pocket suddenly, and I point the
nailer at his face.
“It’s a headlamp, okay? As in, a lamp I wear on my
head.”
“Let me see it,” I say, trying to sound menacing.
He takes the headlamp out, puts it on his head, and
turns on the light. Then he throws his hands out to the
sides. Ta-da.
“See? Just like I said. Head. Lamp.”
I lower the nailer and kick his computer bag behind me.
“I’ll hold on to this for insurance.”
“No, I need that for what I’m going to do.”
I wait a moment. He makes a motion with his hand,
like gimme, and I push the bag toward him with my foot.
He grabs it and crosses the room in three strides. He takes
a pair of glasses with thick brown frames from his coat
pocket and puts them on. The glasses easily cut his attrac-
tiveness by half. Possibly three quarters.
“Why would you . . . what are you putting those on
for?”
“Because you knocked my contacts out when you
punched me in the face, and now I can’t see.”
I gape at his glasses, wondering if this is what people
wear these days in the outside world. I feel my forehead
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crinkling in dismay at the pure, incandescent ugliness of
them.
“Look, I got them in Pyongyang, okay? This was the
only set of frames they had, and we were kind of in a hurry.
Now stop distracting me.”
At the door of the security cage, he punches in a code.
Nothing happens. He tries again.
“Well, this is embarrassing. Thought I had that code
cracked.”
Scanning the room, he zeroes in on one particular
server. He pulls a tool from his bag and uses it to cut away
part of the cage so he can reach through. Then he pulls
out his laptop, connects a cable, and starts typing madly. A
moment later, he looks relieved and quickly tucks some-
thing into his pocket.
“What did you do?” I ask.
“Took some stuff. Then I killed it.”
“Why?”
“Because that’s what my boss told me to do.”
“Your boss?” Now I’m good and mad. I point the nailer
at his throat. “I thought you said you were trying to get
away from those guys—”
I want to add who are trying to kill me but don’t. Even I
realize how crazy it would probably sound.
“My boss isn’t with those guys,” the boy says. “Well,
actually, he is, but not in the way you think. It’s compli-
cated.”
The boy takes his glasses off and puts them back in his
54
inner coat pocket. Then he crouches down, packs away his
laptop, and zips the bag shut. He looks up at me like he’s
not sure why I’m still here. His eyes are so brown they look
black, or maybe it’s just that his pupils are fully dilated in
this dim light.
He starts for the door.
“Wait. What are you going to do now?” I ask.
“Leave.”
“Leave?”
“Yeah. I’m getting my butt back to the yurt.”
“What did you just say?”
“Yurt.”
“What is that word?”
“Yurt. You know? It’s like a tent. Or a hut.”
“Take me with you.”
“No.”
“Please!” I want to spit that word out of my mouth; it
tastes so much like desperation.
“No.”
I try a different tack. “Look, I take rejection fairly well.
My nailer? Not so much.”
He looks toward the door again and then glances at his
watch. “You don’t seem to understand. . . .”
“No, I don’t understand. I don’t understand what’s going
on at all. There are guys here with guns who just killed
everyone I know!”
He winces. “I’m sorry.”
“You’re sorry? Did you just say you’re sorry?”
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“I meant I’m sorry for you. Not that I’m apologizing
for what’s going on in there, because I had nothing to do
with it. I’ve got my own problems, and I need to get out
of here.”
“You’re complaining to me.” I pull off my cap.
He stares at my bald head a moment and then looks me
in the eye like I’m . . . like he knows I’m a lost cause, but
can’t quite bring himself to break the news to me.
“So you’re one of them.”
“One of who?”
“One of the lab rats here.”
“Obviously.”
He starts to speak, stops, then starts again. “I’m prob-
ably the last person who could help you. Believe me when
I tell you that those guys inside are going to be very cranky
when they realize what I just did. I wouldn’t be doing you
any favors if I let you come with me.”
He’s putting his gloves on now. I guess he assumes I’m
going to just let him walk out the door.
“Tell me something,” I say, trying to keep the anger out
of my voice.
“Can’t.”
“Anything! I need something useful, now, or I will nail
your feet to the floor!” So much for containing my anger.
“I doubt you even know how that thing works.”
I point the nailer at his computer bag. This gets his
attention.
“Take it easy, okay? Just take it easy.”
“Tell me one thing. That’s all.”
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“Okay. One thing.”
“How are you involved, but not involved?”
“My boss is the preeminent hacker in the entire world.
He does jobs for people. People with a lot of money. He got
paid to come here and remove some information.”
“And shoot everyone in sight?”
“We didn’t know they were going to do that. I swear.
Why do you think I’m getting out of here?”
“I don’t believe you. Why would somebody need help
hacking a hospital computer?”
“Hospital? Is that where you think you are?”
I almost blurt out yes, but I know now that this answer
is laughable.
“This ain’t no hospital, sunshine,” he says. “Or maybe I
should say, it’s a lot more than a hospital. This place is seri-
ously state-of-the-art.”
“Why?”
“You know what? No offense, but there’s not much
point in explaining this to someone who’s brain-damaged.”
“I am not brain-damaged.”
“You are, and you’ve got the drill holes to prove it.”
I shoot his computer with my nailer.
He starts howling, jumping, swearing, asking me if
I realize what I’ve just done. I stare at him, unmoved.
Nobody calls me brain-damaged. Even if, technically, I
am.
Suddenly a voice comes over his radio. A woman’s
voice. “Who’s there? Is there someone on the other end?
Answer me.”
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