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Rootless
  • Текст добавлен: 13 сентября 2016, 19:35

Текст книги "Rootless"


Автор книги: Chris Howard



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Текущая страница: 15 (всего у книги 17 страниц)





She called the dome the Orchard, and it was smaller and much quieter than the bunker full of bodies. The Creator opened up the steel door with her plastic key. And once inside, I saw a glimpse of something from a broke-down dream.

I staggered and the Creator caught me. I would have pushed her away, pulled myself free. But I felt upside down, as dizzy as when I’d been sick back in the mud pit. All full of a fever that stretched out my mind.

I heard the Creator. She was speaking to me. Trying to explain what was going on. But she didn’t refer to the man as my father. Or Pop. Or anything like that.

She just called him the Producer.

Locked up, Zee had said. My dad was somewhere on the island. Locked up. But no one had really told me anything. Because no one had said one damn thing about this.

Pop didn’t need to be locked up.

He didn’t need to be wrapped up in chains.

He’d left me out near the cornfields. Down in the dirt. But now, seeing him again, it was like he was leaving me all over. And it was like I was just watching, turning to stone as he floated away.

They had him inside a big old tank of water. A tank glowed up with golden lights. There ain’t a way I can really tell what they’d done to him. There’s not words built for what they had going on.

I swayed forward. Part of me wanted to run up and press my face at the glass. But I just waited, watching as the Creator strolled up to the tank and checked the gadgets that were wired against it.

I counted seven saplings.

Each one of them was fresh, bright green, budding in the liquid. Two of the saplings had grown out of Pop’s legs, and one was growing on each of his hands. There was one on his head, one out the belly. And the smallest one curled out from his chest. Straight from his heart.

Pop’s skin was green and knotted. Fibrous. The hair on his scalp had grown twiggy and black. His face was buried under a mess of green roots, and right where his mouth should have been was where a sapling wound upward in the golden lights.

I remember being grateful Pop’s eyelids were sealed shut.

No faraway look in his faraway eyes.

Thought I might puke. Let it all spill out of me. But I just shuffled closer. My footsteps echoed as they scraped at the floor. I went ahead and got next to the glass, and I knelt down by the rubber wheels the tank had been placed upon.

No matter what you called the thing floating in there, it was still my father. What was left of him, anyway. And if what the woman said was true, he might somehow live on forever now. Just keep on going.

But not in the ways that mattered.

I closed my eyes and pictured that forest we’d talked of building. The metal trees and a house of our own. And I saw myself sitting amid the forest and every leaf and branch had turned rusty and broken and all the trees were nothing but holes. I had our old book in my hands, but I’d forgotten all the stories and I was ripping out the pages now, crumpling them and burning them along with Pop’s corn husk sombrero. And I’d quit eating so I was just made of bones and even the locusts wouldn’t touch me. And no one would touch me or see me or hear me as I began screaming for my father in the never ending night.

When I opened my eyes I was still screaming and the Creator had wrapped her arms around me and everything seemed to suffocate me. Heavy and loud. So I quit screaming. I just squatted there. Quiet. Still. The Creator crawled off me, sat on the concrete and watched me. And I knew I had to find a way to let go of this feeling. I had to find some way to keep in control. And I had to play things out right, in front of this woman. Everything depended on it.

So I told her what she’d done to my father was beautiful.

And you know what’s messed up?

It was sort of beautiful. In its own horrible way. And I remembered what I’d said to Crow about heaven and hell and how they’re maybe just the same thing anyway. Glory and hunger. Fear and love. All looped together so there’s no place where one ends and the next one’s beginning.

And then, as I stared into the tank, I thought maybe the world wasn’t as dead as we’d thought it. Maybe it was just lying dormant. Waiting for seeds.

“The liquid preserves the microclimate,” the Creator said, still watching me, her voice scuffed and loose. “Protects him from winter.”

I swallowed. Almost spoke.

“He’s safe,” she whispered. “This is the one. Where every test went right.” She stood, staring into the tank. “He’s a hundred percent locust-proof. Free from harm. Forever.”

I tried to see a way my dad was just sleeping inside what was growing in there. His mind still working, still thinking. Dreaming. Not dead, somehow. Not gone.

“What about his brain?” I whispered.

She shook her head. “He’s more tree now than man.”

The words stabbed at me. I felt them in my guts. My bones. Nothing makes the world seem hopeless like knowing it’s empty. But I had to cut off those parts that the knowing infected. Those parts that can cause you nothing but pain.

“And what’ll be left?” I said, clenching my fists as if I might squeeze out the hurt and let it drip from my fingers. “After you’ve used him.”

“Just enough to regenerate for the next crop. His body became the perfect breeding ground. And we’ll keep fusing these cells to human tissue until we’ve reached enough diversity.”

“And then?”

“Then my work will be done.” She put her hand on the wall of the tank, and it left a sticky smear on the glass. “His work, too.”

Outside the Orchard, we stood huddled together as snow fell white against the darkness. I felt like I’d been punched flat and sucked dry. My head was pounding and parched.

“I am sorry,” the Creator said, hunching her shoulders. “I’m sorry your father and I caused you so much pain.”

The woman smiled at me and for the first time I felt bad for her, because I knew there was no part of her that could understand what I felt.

She’d stayed here, searching for a solution that cost hundreds of lives. Thousands, maybe. And no matter how she justified it, the way I saw it, everything the world now needed only GenTech was going to get. But how could she not see that? How could she choose to be so damn blind?

We crunched back through the snow with our hoods hiding our faces, making our way toward the building where Zee would be sleeping and Crow would hopefully be healing so as to be ready to fight. You got to be strong, that’s what I told myself. For Alpha and all the other prisoners. For what was left of my father. For the taken. The burned. For the empty-bellied strugglers. On this island we could bust a hole in something wicked. And I’d die if I had to. Or I’d live. And bring home the trees.

There was an agent standing watch at the door to the building. He was bundled and wrapped as we were, buried inside a huge puffy coat.

“Good evening, Creator,” the man said.

“Staying cold enough for you?” She swiped her electronic tag to unseal the door.

“Oh, don’t worry about me, miss,” the man said, and his voice wound my guts tight inside me. “I love to see the seasons. No matter how cold they get.”

As the door began to slide back in place and lock us inside, I stared back at the bulky figure all covered in fuzz and GenTech logos. A gun on his back and a club in his hand. Just like all the agents. Except he had a voice I’d heard and would always remember. Because this agent wasn’t just no one. Or anyone.

This agent was Frost.






I didn’t sleep. I just waited at the side of Crow’s bed, counting the seconds till he woke up again. The work they’d done on his legs had helped repair his skin as well, gave him a sort of sheen where before he’d been all scarred and blistered. The new limbs were something else, though. Strapping big legs, all scaly with bark. They were stuck outside the sheets, full of lumps and grooves, and they were bigger even than the originals had been. If Crow woke up able to use them, I reckoned those legs would have him standing about ten feet tall.

Crow’s face was peaceful, looked like he was catching up on a whole lifetime of sleep. And I just sat there, restless, watching the watcher.

“Crow,” I finally whispered.

“What?”

“You sleeping?”

“No. I be talking to you.” He opened his eyes. “What you doing here staring at me?”

“Wanted to see how you’re doing.”

“Okay. We doing okay.”

“The legs,” I said.

“Yeah, man. I been trying to use them.”

“How long?”

“Long enough, man. Long enough.”

I stared down at his legs and they weren’t even twitching. “Maybe it’ll just take awhile,” I said.

“Sure, Banyan. Maybe.”

“I gotta tell you something.”

“What?”

“Frost’s here.”

This got his attention and he turned his glare on full.

“Frost?”

“Yeah. I seen him.”

“Old bastard must’ve volunteered himself.”

“Why would he do that?”

“I don’t know. Maybe he didn’t have much choice. Or maybe he just paid his way up here. How in Jah’s name would I know?”

“Listen,” I said, not sure what I was going to say till the words were coming out. “I think we can use him.”

“Frost? No, man. Frost can’t be trusted.”

“We don’t need to trust him, just get him on our side for a bit.”

“And then what?”

“Then we can get rid of him. Once and for all.”

“You’re cold, Banyan. Cold.”

“Yeah? Well, you ain’t got legs, pal. And I’m gonna need a little help here.”

“Sell your soul to the devil, then. What do I care?”

“It’s just an idea,” I said, trying to calm him down.

“Just a bad idea.”

“You partnered with him.”

“And look where that got me.”

“We only got till the end of the day. That’s it. I got a plan, but I’m gonna need some help.”

“You should talk to Zee. She’ll help, man. She’ll help.”

“Okay. You rest up. Try to get those legs moving. I’ll come back and check on you.”

“You going to talk to Zee?”

“Yeah,” I said, but I was lying.

I was going to talk to Frost.

I strode outside into the dead part of morning. Snow all over the ground and no sunrise. Frost was gone and a different, thinner agent stood guard at the entrance.

“The man here before you,” I said. “You know where he went?”

The agent pointed and I took off the way he’d gestured, following Frost’s footsteps all the way up the hill.

When I’d made it down the other side, I found Frost in the clearing, rooting around in the scrap I’d dug from the ground. He had his hood off and his fat face was pink and chapped by the cold. Dark roots had grown in behind his bleached white hair. I stood there watching him awhile from inside my jacket, concealed in the bulk and fuzz, and hidden by trees. Then I stepped forward and Frost jerked around at the sound of my footsteps.

“Oh, hey there,” Frost said, taking me for just another agent. He went back to poking around at the salvage. “You know what the hell all this is for?”

“Yeah,” I said, pulling down my hood. “It’s for the tree I’m building.”

Frost’s eyes grew as fat as the rest of him.

“It’s really you?”

I nodded, and Frost laughed.

“Crow was supposed to cut your damn throat.”

“You can take that up with Crow, if you like. He’s here, too.”

“Is he, now? So we all made it, did we? You and me. The watcher.” Frost made a slimy grin. “And the pretty little thing.”

“How the hell’d you find this place?”

“Even agents can be bargained with.”

“Coordinates didn’t work so well, I guess.”

“No matter. Keep digging and you find the dirt you need. Went and got myself employed.” Frost spread his arms wide, showing off his purple threads.

“You should know your boy’s dead.”

“My boy?” Frost’s grin broke down and his jaw clamped tight. “I left him behind. To keep him safe.”

“You don’t keep someone safe by ditching them,” I said. “Sal came looking for you. And now he’s dead.”

Frost blinked at the snow. “Tell me you’re lying.”

“I ain’t lying. They killed him.”

Frost’s hands were shaking, and he pulled his gloves off to scratch around at his knuckles and at the back of his arms. Been awhile since he’d had his fix, I reckoned. Not a whole lot of crystal on Promise Island.

“Your wife’s dead, too,” I told him, and Frost’s hands stopped shaking.

“My wife?” His anger grew him taller, stretched his face into a grin you’d not call smiling. “She made you feel wrong just wanting her. And besides, there seems to be no shortage of that woman running around.”

“Well, the one you were married to is dead.”

Frost waved his hand in the air, like he was dismissing his grief. But I wondered if maybe he’d needed Hina like he needed the crystal, if maybe it’s the needing that leaves you spiky and torn.

“Plenty more where that came from,” Frost said. “Though she was an awfully lovely bit of ass.”

Suddenly I got the feeling Crow was right. I couldn’t deal with this guy. Glued to a vice that can ruin the best of them. And Frost weren’t the best of them, not by a midnight mile.

But I needed him. And I let him talk.

“The Creator, now she’s a real ballbuster, I’m thinking. But let’s face it, she’s getting a bit long in the tooth. Zee, on the other hand, now isn’t she something? Why else you think I kept the little bitch around?”

“Got it all figured out, don’t you, fat man?”

“Man’s gotta have a plan, tree builder.”

“So what the hell you doing out here?”

“Well, first of all.” He pointed at the trees. “They’re lovely, I’m sure you agree. And second, I aim to smuggle one back with me. To the mainland. I can’t sell something to GenTech they already own, but you might remember you were supposed to be building me a forest. And I’m going to put one of these things right in the darn middle of it. Just see if I don’t.”

“That’s it?”

“That’s it. People will pay plenty to see themselves a real tree.”

“The locusts, Frost. You got a plan for them as well?”

“Glass,” he said, looking like I was the idiot. “I’m gonna cage it up in glass. Keep it safe.”

“You’re a fool,” I said, and I strode right up to him. “You’re a fat piece of grease and I could turn you over to them. Right now.”

“But you’re not going to, are you? You followed me out here, I figure you got something to say.”

“You’re thinking too small,” I said. “That’s your problem. One of these trees ain’t gonna get you nowhere at all.”

“Go on.”

“What you really need is something the locusts can’t go eating. What you really want is the thing that makes GenTech different from the rest of us.”

“You mean that thing in the Orchard.”

“That’s exactly what I mean.”

“Nice little pipe dream you got there, Mister B. But maybe you didn’t spot the troop of heavily armed agents. Or see the doors that open according to only one key.”

“There’s a whole army I guarantee would be happy to start fighting. Just gotta wake them up, that’s all.”

Frost stared at the hill. He chewed his lip.

“They’d need weapons,” he said finally.

“You’re an agent, aren’t you? Can’t you track down some guns?”

Frost gazed back and forth between me and the trees.

“Who’s in on this?” he said.

“You and me. And Crow.”

“What about Zee?”

“Yeah. She’s coming with us.”

“Then you can have my help. But I get her. I get Zee when we’re finished.”

“Okay,” I said, and a switch got flipped inside me. Frost could not leave the island, that’s what I was telling myself. He just could not leave this place.

The fat man reached out his hand with the missing finger. And I shook it. Maybe I shouldn’t have.

But I did.






One hour past sunset and everything would change. By my best guess, that was when the medicine would start turning the prisoners into something that weren’t human. That’s when we’d lose our army. And that’s when I’d lose Alpha.

But that wasn’t going to happen, I told myself.

I wouldn’t let it.

The sun set around three, and there’d be an hour of darkness for Frost to smuggle the weapons into the bunker and shut down the system so as to wake up the prisoners. My job was to create a diversion. But I also had to find a way to get the key to the Orchard. I figured the first job was pretty easy. The second task, not so much.

Frost was a gamble. I knew that. Any way you looked at it, he was nothing but risk. But what else could I do but try and use him? Way things had unfolded, Zee couldn’t be trusted to keep her mouth shut. And Crow couldn’t even walk.

I kept asking Zee to check on him, and she’d wade off through the snow then shuffle back to the forest, but the news was always the same.

No news.

The morning passed too quick, and I got sloppy with my work. I built a single tree in the middle of the clearing. Just one damn tree. But without my normal tools, and maybe because of the way I was feeling, nothing seemed to go quite right with it.

I was tired. Running on fumes. But I bent the rusty iron into a twelve-foot funnel, and that’s what I buried in the ground. Then I broke up the tubes and used the metal for branches that I set to turn on the hubcaps, rigging cans and broken glass where the leaves should have spun.

Told you. Kind of a rush job.

The important part was what I did with the cable. And with that big metal drum. I patched up the drum so it’d hold without leaking, and then I built it into the crown of the tree. I strung the cable out of the drum and ran it all the way around the forest. Took me ages. I had to set it just right, connecting all the treetops into one giant wire canopy.

One other thing – before I ran that cable out, I’d soaked it in a big old barrel. A barrel full of the same stuff I’d poured inside the metal drum that I’d tied high in the tree.

Juice.

My secret ingredient.

Remember, when you build it’s all about the details. Well, this was a detail that was going to make this forest come alive, all right. It’d be illuminated brighter than all the LEDs you could harness.

And then it would burn.

Right down to the ground.

Zee got back from checking on Crow just as I finished rigging up the cables. The cold air was pretty ripe on account of all the juice, and Zee scrunched her nose as she stared at the tree.

“What do you think?” I asked her.

“I’ve seen better, I’m not gonna lie.”

“Guess that’s what you get for rushing greatness.”

“That’s some stinky kind of greatness. Looks better than it smells, I’ll give you that.”

“Generator’s leaking.”

“So you can’t get the lights going?”

“We’ll see,” I said, needing to change the subject. “How’s Crow?”

“Same as he was two hours ago. And two hours before that. But he says he wants to come and see your tree.”

“No,” I said. “He can’t come over here. You gotta make sure he stays where he is.”

“Why?”

I wanted to tell her that I needed her and Crow safe and out of the way, but I couldn’t tell her why. Not yet.

“Just do me a favor and keep Crow where he is. Out of sight.”

“But he wants to see your tree.”

“Why?” I snapped. “It’s just a piece of junk. Tell him to keep where he’s at.” I should have already told Crow my plan and now I was panicked. There wasn’t any time.

The sun was getting low in the sky and I’d told the Creator to be here at first sign of dark, told her I’d show her my work. My lousy fake tree.

Zee coughed on her crappy lungs. She stood staring at me.

“Listen,” I told her. “You run along back to the base and keep Crow company. You tell him Banyan said to just sit tight. Can you do that?”

She didn’t say anything.

“I’ll be right along,” I said. “Just sit tight and wait for me.”

“Okay,” she said, then she turned and ran through the forest, and I just stood there watching her, waiting until I could see her high up on the slope beyond the trees.

I poached a nail gun out of the toolbox they’d given me. I shoved the gun deep in the pocket of my big coat. And then I sat in the snow and I waited for sundown.






The Creator appeared on the hillside as the sun disappeared behind it. She was right on time. And she was alone. Just as I’d told her.

I’d started to get pretty damn cold, so I was pacing around the clearing and flapping my arms about, stomping my feet. It got dark real quick. Too dark to see. And I heard the woman get close before I spotted her again.

“Banyan,” she called, snapping through the branches. I watched her fire up a flashlight and wave it around the clearing. “Where are you?”

“Right here,” I said. “Right here.”

She found me with her torch beam and I watched her tug down her hood, and her face was smiling like I’d not yet seen.

“Turn off the light,” I said. “It’s supposed to be a surprise.”

“But I can already see how beautiful you made it.” She was up close to the tree now, messing her hands in the glass-bottle leaves.

“It’s not quite finished, though,” I said, and I was suddenly impatient. “You gotta stand back here to see it right.”

“Oh, but it’s lovely, Banyan. Such craftsmanship.”

I pictured Frost waiting with his guns in the dark. I pictured Alpha and all those empty faces that needed me. And how much time was left? How much longer before it would all be too late?

“Come on over,” I said, trying to sound all cheery about it. “Come stand with me.”

She trudged through the snow, taking her own sweet time. But then she was close beside me, staring up at the new addition to her forest. And that was when I pulled the nail gun out and pointed it at her chest.

“I’m gonna need that key to the Orchard,” I said, my voice shaking as much as my damn hand. “The tag that gets you in there, I’m gonna need it.”

But she just stared at me through the darkness, and her face was suddenly as old as the earth and as bitter as the cold wind off the water.

“The key,” I said. Kept saying it, too.

“What are you going to do?” she whispered.

“I’m taking him. Pop. What’s left of him, anyway. Taking the trees back to the mainland. Setting them free.”

“No,” she said. “I mean, what are you going to do to me?”

I tried to steady my hand. “Just give me the key, woman.”

“I’m your mother, Banyan.”

“Like hell you are,” I said, suddenly shouting at her. “I don’t even know you.”

“Because he stole you from me. Because he stole you and now I deserve this?”

“You don’t deserve shit, lady. And there’s a hundred bodies waiting to die in that bunker to prove what you are.”

“What?” she screamed back at me. “What is it you think I am?”

“You’re a killer,” I said, and I pushed the nail gun toward her. “And a thief. And I’m gonna take that key.”

But I couldn’t do it.

Just couldn’t.

Everything had gone wrong and now she was crying and I began to hate myself for it. I wanted to stop her from crying and just let her go. Forgive her, I guess. That’s what I wanted.

But there was no time for that now.

“Come on,” I said as she crumpled and wailed. She was sinking in the snow and I tried to grab at her, feel in her pockets, find the tab that I needed so I could just start my diversion and get the hell out of there.

Then I suddenly felt like too much time was wasting, like I needed to get this show on the road. So I left the woman where she was and took aim at the tree, pointing the nail gun right up at the drum full of juice. I began squeezing the trigger.

But something stopped me.

I heard footsteps in the snow behind me but before I could turn, I felt a club smash my head. One of those spiky bastards. GenTech issue. Driving right into my skull and turning the whole world white.

I hit the snow all splayed out and bleeding. I blinked until my eyes could see again, and then I spun my face to the sky. The nail gun was gone. Long gone.

And there she was. That face that was going to just keep haunting me. Zee. Standing above me with the club in her hand and her body all breathless and her face covered in snot and tears.

She was saying something but I couldn’t hear her. And it wasn’t because of my head being busted or the ringing in my ears. It was because in the distance, over the ridge, there were gunshots. And all I could think was that Frost was in trouble. And that my whole plan had already failed.


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