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making him very happy. Finally, my curiosity overpowers
my exhaustion, and I get up and look over his shoulder.
He’s staring at a screen filled with nothing but lines of
numbers.
In the blackness of the screen, I see the dark reflection
of my own face. I jerk my head back, averting my eyes. I’m
not ready to look at myself.
“What’s all that?” I ask.
He holds up his index finger momentarily and then
keeps typing, grimacing in disgust. I wait another minute
for a response, but he seems to have forgotten I’m standing
there.
“I’m starving,” I say.
I remember the sandwich I stuffed into my jacket
pocket. I go back into the foyer to get it. The sandwich has
congealed into a gooey ball. I walk back into the tent, sit
down, and take a bite of the mess in my hand.
Pierce must smell the same thing I do as I bite down:
slightly spoiled lunch meat. His lip curls in disgust. “What
are you eating?”
“I don’t know.”
“You might be a lab rat, but you’re not a real rat. No
need to eat garbage. Go look over there. Lots of delicious
freeze-dried food to choose from. The instructions are
on the packets.” He points toward the propane stove with
the kettle on top. “Make me something, too. Not the beef
enchiladas, though. They taste like Mexicans.”
“Aren’t enchiladas supposed to taste Mexican?”
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“No, I mean they taste like actual Mexicans. Unwashed
ones.”
He looks at me, and his face goes red faster than a stop-
light. “No offense.”
“No offense about what?”
“Aren’t you—I mean . . . you could be Mexican, right?”
“What?”
“You look, you know, Mexican. Or something.”
“Right. Or something.”
“Although you’ve got green eyes, so maybe you’re Mex-
ican and something else mixed together.”
If I had eyebrows, they’d be arching at that comment.
“Maybe you should stop talking now.”
“Yes, maybe I should, before you decide that I’m some
huge racist jerk and not just an awkward idiot who was
trying to be funny.”
I turn away from him and look through the plastic
packets of food. I have green eyes. That’s what Mrs. Este-
ban told me, too. Until he said it, I wasn’t sure my memory
could be counted on. But this much is true: I have green
eyes.
When the water in the kettle boils, I add it to the con-
tents of the packet. A few minutes later we are both eating
hot, gritty chili. I obviously didn’t let the water hydrate the
food properly, but I was too hungry to wait. My impatience
has been rewarded with kidney beans hard as pebbles.
Pierce doesn’t seem to notice or care. He eats while look-
ing at the computer screen. I guess this is how it’s going
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to be—him doing whatever he’s doing, and me just sitting
here watching.
Finally he says, “Seriously, you might as well have a rest.
Maybe take a nap. This is going to take a lot longer than I
thought.”
He returns to the computer with a look on his face that
I’d call “entranced.” Maybe “obsessed.”
I realize that I don’t just want to sleep; I have to sleep.
But I can’t. The temperature in the yurt is dropping. After
a few minutes of pacing around and rubbing my hands
together to stay warm, I see Pierce start shivering, too. He
keeps mistyping and swearing. Finally he gets up and puts
a couple of brown bricks into the black pot. The bricks
smolder, then catch. They smell like candle wax.
My head starts to throb. Maybe the sudden heat is get-
ting to me. I sway and almost lose my balance.
“Whoa there. You all right?”
“I’m fine.”
“You’re fine? Well, then lie down until the fineness
passes.”
I’m about to say no, but can’t think of why I should.
Lying down is a perfectly good idea when you’re about to
fall down.
I sit down on the mattress, and Pierce lifts my feet up
and positions them for me before covering me with a blan-
ket. “Let me know if you need anything.”
I am inexpressibly grateful and so, naturally, I say noth-
ing.
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Pierce sits back down and keeps working. The sound of
his fingers on the keyboard, the sight of his profile in those
awful glasses . . . I feel myself starting to drift off.
Just as the world’s edges start to get fuzzy, I hear him
talking to me, although his voice sounds different. It’s
deeper and slower and full of reverb; it’s like he’s reciting
poetry from the far side of a metal tunnel. He’s telling me
something about how the storm is coming; that I can sur-
vive it. That I can survive anything, because I’m special,
and he won’t just stand by and let them kill me. . . .
Is this real?
I’m not sure. I don’t care. All I know is that I feel safe
for the first time that I can remember. Which isn’t very
long, I know, but I welcome the feeling just the same. For
however long it’s going to last.
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CHAPTER 8
oices. So many voices in my head. I hear someone talk-
Ving. It’s the red-haired woman, Hodges. She’s talking
to me. No, about me.
“What rotten timing, officer,” she says. “I was just on my way
to see La Bohème. But I’m glad you finally caught her. Truly.
Well done, NYPD.”
The red-haired woman is sitting across from me in a dress that
seems to be made of a hundred yards of purple silk, seed pearls,
and puffs of air.
Flouncy.
That’s the word that comes to me when I look at her.
She’s clutching a fur wrap around her narrow shoulders and
holding a sequined purse in her hand. Her hair is pinned up with
a sparkling hair clip.
We’re in a police interrogation room no bigger than a large
closet. There’s a table and four chairs. One wall is dark glass—an
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observation window. I glare at it, daring whoever is behind it to
face me.
Sitting next to the red-haired woman is a middle-aged cop. His
holster is visible underneath his suit jacket, and as he leans forward
to pull his chair closer to the table, the handle of his gun knocks
against the armrest and a sprinkle of dandruff lands on the table
in front of him.
The red-haired woman pinches the bridge of her nose like she
has a terrible headache. “I’m glad we can finally bring this to a
close. This vandalism has gone on quite long enough, and as usual,
the media have the story all wrong. She doesn’t look like much of
a hero to me. What do you think, officer?”
“Nah. Not much of one.”
“So how did you catch her? I’m curious.”
“We got an anonymous tip and just waited at the bottom of
the crane. Treed her like a squirrel until she finally had to come
down or fall.”
“Thank you, lieutenant. If it’s all right, do you think I could
talk to her a moment? Privately, I mean. She might feel more com-
fortable if it’s just me, and we might be able to get to the bottom of
all this that much more quickly.”
“Are you sure?”
“I’m sure.”
“I’ll be just outside the door if you need me.”
As he gets up, he gives me a look that says, Don’t try any-
thing or I will stomp on your neck. Then he leaves me with
this woman who I’ve never seen before—even though she’s acting
like she knows me.
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The red-haired woman rests her elbows on the table and bats
her eyelashes at me.
“New York City,” she says.
She says nothing else for a long while. I look around the room
like I can’t be bothered talking to her and finally ask, “What
about it?”
“New York is soooo welcoming. I would never have believed
it. Here I am, just a poor girl from Georgia. Yet I’ve come all this
way to . . . ”
I roll my eyes.
“You should really listen to this, Sarah. It’s important that
you understand. You see, when people say they grew up poor
and they’re from Georgia, that’s a very different kind of poor.
A whole other level of poor. Even you and your tenement apart-
ment and your mother who’s worked as a domestic her whole
life—even you can’t begin to understand how poor Georgia poor
really is.”
“Is that right?”
“But I come here to New York, scratch and claw my way up
through so many terrible, demeaning jobs. You have no idea how
badly people will treat you when they know you have to take it.
But I learned a few things over the years, and I’ve come to see
what’s really important.”
I stare at her.
“You see, you have to set a goal and not let anything or anyone
stand in the way of it. That’s what I do, and that’s the reason I’m
here now, in this beautiful dress, on my way to the opera. A true
New Yorker.”
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I raise my cuffed hands and let them plunk down onto the
table. I’m wearing a tank top, jeans, and a beat-up pair of sneakers
held together with duct tape around the toes. I have dirt under my
fingernails and I smell like the streets, like bus exhaust and urine.
I say nothing. I’m very sure that this woman in the flouncy purple
dress has no idea what the real New York City is.
I’m New York City. I sneer at her to let her know I think she’s
a pathetic poser.
“You could learn a thing or two from me, Sarah. You really
could. About determination. And commitment.” She adjusts a
small, diamond-encrusted C brooch on her dress. “But of course
you won’t learn. Which is unfortunate for both of us.”
I stretch my neck back and forth. My arms are still achy. I’d
been hanging on to that crane for an hour when the police finally
showed up. How could they have known where I’d be?
“Have you been listening to me, Sarah?”
“What? Yeah, sure. You were poor. Now you’re not. Good for
you. Is this little pep talk over now?”
She smacks the table with the palm of her hand and I jump. I
glance at the dark glass, wondering if someone is going to come in,
but no one does.
“Who are you? My new case manager?”
But as soon as I say it, I know it can’t be true. This woman is
not like anyone I’ve ever met. Not in school, not in the foster care
system. Whoever she is, she’s not here to spew the usual hopeful,
encouraging pile of garbage they’ve tried to feed me regularly since
my mother died.
“Who am I?” she says.
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She extends her hand to shake mine, laughing lightly as if she’d
completely forgotten I’m cuffed and shackled and can’t possibly raise
my hand to meet hers.
“My name is Evangeline Hodges, and sweetheart, right now
you are ruining my whole damn life.”
A loud burst of static jolts me fully awake. I roll onto my
side, off the mattress, and then try to stand up.
Was I dreaming?
No. I was remembering—remembering the red-haired
woman’s voice. It’s the very same voice I just heard come
out of the radio before it landed on the other side of the
yurt. Pierce startled when I got up, and the walkie-talkie
he was cradling in his lap flew six feet.
“Hey! Careful! It took me an hour to figure this out.”
“What?”
He picks the walkie-talkie up carefully by the antenna.
The back of the radio has been removed, and some of the
wires are sticking out. “8-Bit’s radio. Those soldier dudes
are using an encryption program. It changes frequencies a
hundred times a second.”
I’m hardly awake, and even if I were, I wouldn’t under-
stand what he’s saying.
“I slowed down the interval that their frequency changes
and . . . never mind. Point is, we can hear them for about
a minute before the frequency hops again and we lose the
signal. Assuming they’re in range.”
“What?”
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“I’m explaining the way this—it doesn’t matter. We can
hear them talking, and they don’t know it.”
I sit down on the edge of the mattress, and we lean in
close over the radio. It squelches and buzzes, and we hear
nothing but static. Then, suddenly, a deep, digitized voice
breaks through. The words are garbled, and the signal cuts
out a couple times. A woman answers back. It’s Hodges.
“Where is he?” she demands. “I want him found.”
“We think he’s on the sixth floor somewhere. We’re
searching room to room now, ma’am.”
“Get him out of there. I don’t care how. He’s messed my
plan up enough as it is.”
“Most of the offices up here have coded locks. It could
take some time.”
“I don’t want to hear excuses. Don’t you people have
things that go boom? Use them!”
I look up at Pierce. “Who are they looking for? Did you
hear a name?”
“No. Now shhhh.”
“She definitely said he though, right?”
“Yeah. That’s what I heard.” Pierce gives me an odd
look, like he’s trying to figure something out that makes
no sense. “Who is she?”
He says it like he’s talking to himself, so I don’t answer.
We stay hunched over the radio for another minute, but the
voices fade in and out and we hear nothing useful. Then
the signal jumps again and all we hear is static.
“We lost them.”
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A sudden gust of wind shakes the yurt. I gasp.
Pierce puts his hand on my shoulder. “It’s okay.” He
looks up at the ceiling, which is moving violently. “Well,
okay-ish. Maybe.”
I shoot to my feet. “What time is it?”
“Why, you got a hot date?”
“Just tell me.”
“You were only asleep for about ninety minutes.”
I exhale in relief and sit back down. More than once,
I’ve awakened to find that hours or even whole days have
passed. But it’s fine. There’s no need for another pill just
yet. That’s all that matters.
I feel a backdraft through the hole in the roof. It scatters
ash from the glowing brick in the black pot. I pace back
and forth in the small space, going over the memory, trying
to make sense of it, but I get nowhere.
“Sorry I fell asleep while you were talking to me,” I say.
He looks at me, confused. “I wasn’t talking to you. I’ve
been sort of consumed with the radio and all this stuff on
the flash drive that 8-Bit left me.”
“Oh.”
I sit down in the chair opposite him and put my hands
around my skull and squeeze gently. I do this every time I
wake up.
“Are you in pain? I have something you can take.”
“What? Oh, no, thanks. This is just a thing I do. I think
I just need to check that my head’s still there sometimes.”
I raise my eyes and notice Pierce looking at me like he
wants to ask me a question.
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“I know what you’re going to ask,” I say.
“What?”
“Is it weird being bald?”
“Well, is it? I mean, for a girl.”
“I guess it’s no weirder than having no memory.”
“You seriously don’t remember anything? Like, not
even what you had for breakfast?”
I’m not sure what, if anything, I should share about
these confusing things coming back to me. It’s almost like
I’m being haunted, and I’m too afraid to tell anyone about
the ghosts I see because they’ll think I’m crazy. I don’t want
Pierce to think I’m crazy.
“Oatmeal and grapefruit juice.”
“Good for you. I had a candy bar and cold instant cof-
fee.”
We smile at each other, and I realize that you can half-
trust someone for a while—maybe even a long while—but
there will always come a moment when you must choose
to let go and trust completely or withdraw. Somehow I’ve
come to this point already.
I decide to let go, and I’m surprised by how easy it is and
how willing I am to do it.
“There’s stuff I remember, but I’m not exactly sure
when it happened or why. Most of the time I have this odd,
drifting feeling, like the world isn’t quite solid or I’m not.
Other times I’ll have these intense feelings that come out
of nowhere. I have no idea what causes them. All I know is
they’re never good.”
“I find that to be the case for me, too.”
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