Authors: Jennifer Rush
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction / Action & Adventure - General, #Juvenile Fiction / Science & Technology, #Love & Romance, #Juvenile Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction / Love & Romance, #Science & Technology, #General
“Did it go okay?” He popped the straw in his mouth and sat down in front of his computer.
“Fine,” I lied. I spun around in my desk chair so that I faced the boys. Cas was bouncing a tennis ball off the ceiling of his cell. Trev had disappeared into his bathroom. Nick was still watching TV.
Sam, though… Sam just lay on his back, eyes closed.
“How was your phone call?” I asked Dad. “Was it Connor?”
“It was. And it was fine.”
Connor called from the Branch to check in a lot, but he only showed up every couple of months to look the boys over, and to ask Dad if he thought “the units” were ready. Dad said no every time. And when I asked him what the boys had to be ready for, he gave me his default answer:
That’s classified.
Sam shifted to a sitting position, the muscle in his forearm dancing. Every day, at exactly two PM, he worked out. Watching him was like watching a tightly choreographed routine—every move counted.
I glanced at the digital clock hanging on the wall: 1:55 PM.
Sam tore off his white T-shirt and turned around, giving me a view of the tattoo on his back. Four birch trees covered the majority of his skin, the branches twining across his shoulders and partway down his arms.
Bending over, legs straight, he started a series of stretches before dropping into push-up position. I’d counted his push-ups once while pretending to read some charts. He did a hundred in a matter of minutes and never slowed. Dad said strength was a trait he and his team had manipulated, and Sam was proof that the genetic alterations had worked.
After the push-ups, Sam moved to sit-ups, the muscles in his stomach bunching on the rise. Two cells over, Cas was doing his own version of the workout, which was half karate moves collected from TV, half hip-hop dance.
At 2:51, Sam slowed to cooldown mode and ran through more stretches. When he finished, he grabbed a towel from his desk, wiped the sweat from his forehead, and looked over at me.
I blushed and turned away, pretending to find something extremely interesting in the control panel as he disappeared into his bathroom. He came out a second later and tapped on the glass.
I raised my eyes.
“Can I have some ice water?”
“And a beer for me, please!” Cas said, then added, “But water would be fine, too.”
If I had been alone, I would have gotten up, filled two glasses, and handed them over without question. But with Dad there, I deferred to him, because he was the boss, even if I was his daughter.
“That’s fine,” Dad muttered, squinting through the lenses of his glasses as he read over a file.
“A straw, too?” Sam called, gesturing toward the canister on the counter.
“Sure,” Dad said, barely glancing up.
I gave Cas his water first, then went to Sam’s room. He pulled his cup out of the hatch a second later. “Thanks.” He was still shirtless, and I couldn’t help but examine the scar on his chest. I thought of Nick.
Were there other scars? And if so, why? Did Trev or Cas have scars?
When I dragged my eyes up a second later, I found Sam still staring down at me with an intensity that warmed my skin. “Anything else?” I asked.
“No.”
“All right then,” I said. “I should get back to work. Lots of data to input. Files to… file.”
I wheeled around to find my dad looking at me strangely. Did he know how I felt? Could he tell? But he just picked up his straw and returned to his work. I inhaled, trying to shake off the uneasiness. Sam had the ability to reduce me to the thirteen-year-old girl I was when we first met.
I spent the next hour pretending to organize test charts.
WHEN I FIRST DISCOVERED THE BOYS in the lab, Nick immediately scared the crap out of me. Thirteen-year-old me had stared at his hands, tightened at his sides, tracing the swell of veins threading up and around his arms. It was like he’d known he hated me right from the start.
I might never have gone back down there if it hadn’t been for Sam.
The sight of him there, the inquisitive tilt of his head, as if he were reading me from the inside out, was enough to ensnare me even then. I’d never felt so interesting, so special, as I did at that moment.
“What’s your name?” he’d asked, ignoring Nick.
“Anna. Anna Mason.”
“Anna, I’m Sam.”
In the next room over, Nick growled. I could sense the others on
my periphery. Trev paced in his cell. Cas leaned into the glass, the pads of his fingers turning white.
And then Nick slammed a fist into the wall and I flinched.
“Nicholas,” Sam said, his voice razor-edged.
I didn’t see how that would help any, but within seconds Nick retreated. He disappeared into the bathroom at the back of his room, slamming the door shut behind him.
The boys didn’t look much older than sixteen. I didn’t find out until later that their alterations slowed the rate at which they aged. They were closer to eighteen at the time, and over the course of the following years, they would age very little.
I wanted to know what they were doing down there, how long they’d been in those rooms. I wanted to know who they were, and if they were okay, because they weren’t acting okay. But those thoughts tangled in my head, and not one rational question made it past my lips.
“You should go, Anna,” Sam said. “Nick isn’t well.”
“Cookies make me feel better when I’m sick.”
It was such a stupid thing to say, but it was the only thing I managed to get out.
The cookies would give me an excuse, later, to return. Not even Nick could have kept me from Sam, the boy who looked at me as more than just a little girl. And he’d tried. Nick had been the one to tell Dad I’d broken into the lab that first time, the whole reason I’d
been grounded after, the whole reason it took me a few months to sneak back in without getting caught.
Nick never told on me again, though, and part of me had wondered if Sam had been the one to keep him quiet. And if he had, did that mean Sam
wanted
me to visit?
Every morning—and almost every night—it was that hope that propelled me from my bed and pushed me down the stairs.
The next morning, while Dad took care of some phone calls upstairs, I started on my to-do list. Lots of filing. Some paper-shredding. Running Sam through his mental tests. I decided to do the latter first; everything else could wait.
“So what is it this week?” Sam asked as I grabbed his folder from my desk.
I looked over at him. I always fought for his attention, but when I got it, I found it hard to concentrate beneath his gaze.
I opened the folder. “Foreign language.”
Sam pulled his desk chair up to the front of his room, and I did the same. I set the folder on my lap and opened it to a fresh chart. Next to the Branch’s logo—two interlocking circles with a double helix inside—I wrote Sam’s name. Then:
October 11, 11:26 AM
.
This week’s packet was a series of flash cards with Italian phrases on one side, the English translations on the other. Since the boys
suffered from amnesia, the Branch wanted to know what they were capable of, and what skills from their old lives they still possessed.
Apparently, Sam had been a languages genius before entering the program. When it came to skills, I was only good at sketching and solving sudoku puzzles.
I held up the first card and Sam’s eyes moved over the words.
“I am searching for the train station.”
Correct.
I held up the next card.
“What time is it?”
We went over fifty cards total. I marked Sam’s responses on the log. He scored a hundred percent, as usual.
Casually, after sliding my materials into the folder, I said, “Do you remember anything about that scar? The one on your chest?”
He didn’t allow a second’s worth of hesitation before answering. “No. But then, I have a lot of scars.”
“None of them look as purposeful as the one on your chest.”
He went still. I’d caught him in a secret; I could see it on his face. The scars meant something. “Does Cas have a scar like that?”
“Anna.” My name came out a warning, but it served as fuel.
“What do they mean?”
He turned away from me. His back was hunched, the blades of his shoulders rising beneath his shirt. I could see the sharp points of the tattooed tree branches peeking out from his sleeves.
Tell me, Sam.
I sensed the boys shifting, moving toward us.
“Not now,” Sam muttered.
“Excuse me?”
The others slunk away, and the edginess I’d felt slipped away with them.
“I think we’re done, Anna,” Sam said.
I put his folder away with a petty slam of the filing cabinet drawer, because he’d dismissed me and I didn’t want to leave.
At the lab door, I punched in the code with short jabs, making a promise to myself that I wouldn’t sneak into the lab later. That I would hold out for as long as I could, let him see how boring the lab could be without our chess games, without our nightly conversations about the outside world.
But it was more of a punishment for me than for him. And I knew I wouldn’t stick with it.
THAT NIGHT AT DINNER, I PICKED AT my bowl of chili, running the spoon through it in a figure-eight pattern. Dad sat across from me at the dining room table, his spoon clinking against the side of his bowl. Behind us, a football game played on TV. Every now and then, Dad looked up and checked the score. He never got overly excited about the games, though—not like guys on TV. A good play and they’d leap from their chairs, their arms held victoriously above their heads.
I couldn’t see Dad ever doing something like that—not for football, or for science, or even if he won the lottery. Dad was even-keeled, subdued about everything. I thought his lack of emotion stemmed from losing my mother.
Mom had liked sports. At least that’s what Dad said. So maybe he watched for her.
“Dad?”
“Hmm?” He dipped a cracker in the chili.
“Were the boys ever branded?”
He sniffed. “Of course not.”
“Have you noticed Nick’s and Sam’s scars? The ones that look like letters?”
“They have a lot of scars.” An announcer on the TV said something about the second down, but I missed what came next. Dad set the spoon in his bowl and looked up at me. “By the way, I’ve been meaning to tell you…. Let’s hold back on the number of things we give Cas, all right? Why not bring him a book, like you do for the others? He never finishes any of his projects, and his room is a mess….”
“Cas isn’t really a book kind of person.”
“Well…” Dad ran his hand over the back of his head and sighed. “Just try to give him something he’ll actually stick with.” The burst of wrinkles around his eyes furrowed.
“Is this really about Cas, or is there something else?”
The TV crowd cheered behind us.
“No. It’s nothing.”
“Is Connor coming for a visit?” I asked. He wrestled with the sleeve of crackers, avoiding looking at me. “Dad?”
“Yes. Tomorrow. Him and Riley.”
Connor was head of the Branch, and Riley was his second-in-command. Together they oversaw Dad and the program.
“They want to inspect the group,” Dad went on. “See how they’re progressing.”
“Are they taking the boys this time?”
Though I wanted the boys to be released, the lab, the logs, and the tests had all become my life as much as theirs. Now I didn’t know how I felt about them leaving.
Dad shrugged. “I won’t be privy to that until it’s time.”
“Where would they go?”
“I don’t know that, either.”
I couldn’t picture Sam in the real world, buying a doughnut at a coffee shop, reading a newspaper on a park bench. The others, maybe. Cas was like any other party boy trolling for girls. Nick was the epitome of an asshole jock, with the cockiness and pretty face to match. And Trev once told me that if he ever got out, he’d want to go to school to study English literature.
But Sam…
“Will they ever be released?”
Dad removed his glasses and rubbed the bridge of his nose. “I don’t know, Anna. Really. I don’t know.”
I sensed the demise of the conversation and shut up. We finished eating. I did the dishes and wiped down the table, while Dad passed out in the living room. I threw some laundry in the washer.
By that time, it was after eight and dark outside. Upstairs in my
room, I flipped through the TV channels and found nothing worth watching. I didn’t have any new books to read. Since most of the chores were done, I decided to sketch something new in my mother’s journal.
I lay on my stomach on the bed and opened to the last sketch I’d done. It was of a girl in the woods, boughs of maple trees hanging heavy with snow. Her silhouette was blurry, fading, curling, like ribbons of smoke. Like she was disappearing with each new gust of wind. Being lost or broken had been a running theme in my sketches for about a year, ever since I’d taken a weekend art class at the community college.
But it wasn’t the class that opened up the new vein of inspiration. It was the conversation I’d had with Trev afterward.