Read Parched Online

Authors: Georgia Clark

Parched (12 page)

“A little respect, please, Tess,” Mom tutted. “His processing speed is ten to the thirty calculations per second.”

I shrugged. So what?

“Humans only process at ten to the sixteen, Tess.”

“So, he's good at math?” I guessed
.

Mom all but ground her teeth. “Good at—Tess, at those speeds, he
is
math. He's calculating algorithms in a trillionth of a second that took me years!”

“Who cares? He can't even catch.” I wave my hands at him. “Magnus! Catch!” I toss the nail polish at him. His arm moves up, but his reflexes are seconds too slow. The little bottle hits him in the chest with a sharp clink, then falls to the floor and smashes. Polish spills everywhere, like a messy puddle of blue blood
.

“Tess!” Mom exhaled in annoyance. “You'll have to clean that up. Interesting, though . . .” She can't help swishing a note about it into one of the streams
.

“I apologize, Tess,” Magnus said
.

“That's all right, Magnus,” Mom answered for me. “Please keep trying to pick up the plate.”

His hands plunged back into the sink. “So, how human is he, anyway?”

Mom blew air through her lips. “The human body inspired his physical design. He's beginning to display free will. No empathy. Not sure about morality, it's too early to say.”

“But, he's alive, right?”

“Depends on who you ask.”

“What do you think?”

“Personally?” Mom narrowed her eyes. “No. I don't think so. Not yet.”

“I am experiencing difficulty.” Magnus's deep voice was somewhere between human and machine. The plate slid out of his hands and plopped back into the soapy water
.

I rolled my eyes. “I'm experiencing boredom.”

“Try this one.” Mom handed Magnus a champagne flute
.

“I am not able to guarantee the safety of this object.”

“Try,” Mom urged
.

“I am not able to guarantee the safety of this object.”

“Just try—”

A high, almost musical, crash. I jumped, startled, as thin shards of glass scattered across the floor. “Can you
not
do that?”

“I am sorry, Tess. I do not like upsetting you—“

Mom sighed, addressing the artilect. “That's okay—Wait, what did you just say?”

“I do not like upsetting Tess.”

“What? Why?”

Magnus paused. It almost looked as though he was thinking. “Because I like her.”

Mom squealed with excitement, flinging her scratch into the air. “You like her? He likes you! I can't believe it! Tess, do you know what this means?” Mom curled an arm around Magnus's bicep, looking starstruck. “He might actually be
feeling
something!” She giggled hysterically, feet crunching over the glass. “Tess. He
likes
you!”

This is what I remember when it comes to Magnus. Things that break. Now, back in the present, my hands find his cold, hard body. Rage wells inside me. My hand clenches into a fist, about to snap back—but then it falls to my side.

I'm not angry. I'm devastated.

I grab a sweater hanging over the back of a chair. When I scream, it's a wail that's primal and painful. I cry for everything: for my mom, for the fact that I will never, ever see her again. I cry for having to always pretend that I am okay, that I am tough enough to survive this. And I cry because I am so completely alone.

After the worst of it is over, I let the sweater drop, my throat sore, my face hot.

I have to get out of here.

Outside Abel's house, I gulp in cool night air and try to slow the hammering of my heart. Breathing deeply, I focus on making myself feel numb.

But it isn't working. And then I realize, I don't
want
to feel numb anymore.

I am hurt and I am ashamed and I am scared. But I am also motivated. And alive. And angry.

Because now I have a purpose. Now I have a way of making up for what I have done. A mix of revenge, sadness, and anger funnels into a decision that's so simple and neat, it could fit my pocket.

I will help Kudzu destroy Aevum. Just like Magnus destroyed my mother.

And then, standing alone on the silent street that smells of fresh-cut grass and safety, I begin to smile.

chapter 6

I
wake with a gnawing, anxious sensation squeezing my stomach, at once painful and familiar. Hunger and adrenaline. Just like a Badlands morning.

“Tess.” Abel glances up from his morning tea with a pleasant smile. “Your suspended sensory activity is complete.” The steam from the cup drifts and curls as fluidly as a stream.

“Morning.” I'm unable to add a
good
in front of it. I sit down to a plate of lukewarm scrambled eggs and begin shoveling them into my mouth.

Abel studies me from across the dining table. I guess as far as he's concerned, last night bought us closer together, not farther apart. “Is everything all right?”

I almost laugh. Everything might get close to being all right, however, if Ling shows up to meet me today. It didn't take long to work out how to reply to her slew of friendly forest folk. I chose a baby deer wobbling on toothpick legs to tell her I'd be at the filtration plant at noon. I have no idea if she'll show.

“Everything's just great,” I tell Abel, speaking through a mouthful of food. “Peachy as peach pie. With extra peach.”

“Good to hear,” he murmurs. He's watching me. It takes all the will-power I have not to glance at the red basement door.

Instead I meet his gaze, and swallow. “What?”

“I've been thinking about my plan for you.”

A tiny chill skids through me. “Sounds ominous.”

His gnarled hands jitter in front of him. “I mean, our plan for what you'll be doing. If you're not going back to education today.”

I relax a little. Of course. It's Monday morning. “I've been thinking about that too,” I say, licking some egg off my fork. “I think I just need
a few weeks to get back on my feet. Eat. Sleep. Exercise at a Hub. Check out some art, spend some time at the park. Then I'll reenroll.”

He nods slowly. “Sounds like you've put some thought into this.”

“Children are the future, Uncle A,” I say innocently. “Gyan said that himself. I need to take my future seriously.”

He can't tell if I'm being sarcastic. “Yes. Of course.”

I resist the urge to lick my plate clean and instead scrape my chair backward. “I'm out, Uncle A. See you later—”

But Abel stops me with a raised palm. “Just a moment. Until you go back to education, I have some requirements of my own.”

I sit back down with slow caution. “Oh yeah?”

“I'd like Hunter to tutor you,” he says. “In the evenings, after he's done at post-education.”

“What?”

“Tess, you've been out of the education system for a year,” Abel continues calmly. “That puts you at a considerable disadvantage to the other students.”

“This is a joke, right?”

“Hunter's very responsible, very bright—an excellent teacher. And he lives right around the corner. You'll be able to review what you've missed. I dare say you'll be caught up in a matter of months—”

“Months?”
I spit hotly. I'm on my feet. “I can handle a knife, I know how to defend myself, hell, I even know how to kill and cook a damn prairie chicken. Those kids should be learning from
me
—”

“No one is questioning your . . . abilities, Tess,” Abel says, “but this is not up for debate.”

“What if I say no?” I ask, daring him.

“If you want to live at my house, then you will have to obey my rules,” he says with surprising authority.

He's got me. I don't have anywhere else to stay. Abel barrels on hurriedly. “Right, he'll be here at seven o'clock tonight and every week-night for the next month. He has access to the house. I might be here, I might not. Kimiko can fix you dinner.” He pauses, eyeing my reaction.

“Fine.” I groan. “But, can we start tomorrow?” I have no idea what's supposed to happen at Kudzu, assuming I even get there. I don't want to cut anything short because I'm being babysat.

He nods. “Oh,” he adds as I turn to skulk out. “One more thing. Did you turn Kimiko off last night?”

I freeze, eyes popping wide. Then I relax my face and turn to face
him sheepishly. “Yeah. I came down for a snack and I didn't want her to wake you.”

“Next time, just put her to sleep. Shutting her down resets everything in the house.”

I look at the man who's constructing an artilect from the blood of my mother. The man who is working for the Trust. The man who keeps his sister's killer six feet below us in a secret basement. I smile, sweet as syrup. “Sure thing, Uncle A. Whatever you say.”

At first, the Trust kept Moon Lake clean with a large-scale filtration system. A few years ago they developed a microorganism, a simple bacteria that cleans water a hundred times more effectively. Bioremediation. They trumpeted that breakthrough on the streams for months: “That's what you get for putting your trust in the Trust!”

Eventually the old plant will be turned into offices or housing, but for now, it's abandoned. If it weren't for the bright sunlight and high twitter of unseen birds, it'd definitely feel a little spooky. Some of the glass windows are broken, spiderwebbed with cracks. Giant black pumps, once endlessly sucking and spitting water, are now motionless, sprayed with dark red rust. My footsteps echo from the high concrete walls. It's just before noon. I find a concrete ledge to perch on, and I wait.

At 12:30, I wonder how much longer I should stay.

Then I hear it. A low drone, growing louder every second. I stiffen. A floater.

Ling rounds the corner. She's wearing tight white pants, sturdy boots, and a loose white sweater. Even though it's a typical Eden outfit, she still looks like a badass. Maybe it's her eyes, which are narrowed suspiciously at me beneath blunt black bangs.

The hovering floater zooms straight past me. At the other end of the plant, Ling circles around, looking every which way, scoping the place out. Then she rides back to me and stops a good ten feet away.

I slip off the ledge and take a couple hesitant steps toward her.
“Poká. Coméstá?”

“Empty your backpack,” she orders.

“Huh?”

She glares at me. “Now!”

I shrug it off my back, zip it open, and shake everything onto the ground. I don't have much: the scratch she gave me, a muesli bar, a bottle of water, and Mack.

“Is that the scratch I gave you?” she asks.

I nod, holding it out for her to see. “Yeah. Look, Ling—”

“Shut up.” She putters forward on the floater to snatch the scratch from me. She smooths it open and spends a minute swishing through some streams. Satisfied, she scrunches it back into a ball and shoves it in her pocket. “So,” she says, “where were you?” I open my mouth, but she cuts me off. “You know what? Let me guess.” She presses her fingers to her temple like a mind reader. “You bought clothes in the Hive, then took an airbus to a salon in Charity. Pretty fancy one too. Later, you took another airbus back to your uncle's from the Animal Gardens.”

I gape at her. “You were following me?”

She gives me a withering look. “Your new ID, genius. Way to lay low.”

I'd forgotten how hooked up Kudzu were. Of course they could trace my ID. “Ling, I can explain—”

“Save it,” she says, turning her floater around. “We don't deal with traitors.”

“I'm not a traitor!” I cry. “I'm not!”

“See ya, Rockwood,” Ling calls over her shoulder. “As in, never again.”

“Ling, wait!” I race to catch up with her, throwing myself in her path. She pulls the floater to a stop, inches before it crashes into me. “I'm not a traitor. Okay, so I got a new ID. I freaked out when I got to Abel's. I didn't think I could handle it, that being an Edenite would be better. I was wrong. I want to join Kudzu, Ling.”

“Why should I believe you?”

“Because . . .” I rack my brain for a way to make her believe me. “Because yesterday at the salon, I told Izzy and the stylist and anyone else listening that we all should be using less water, and that I don't think Gyan should've cut off Moon Lake!”

I'm expecting Ling to be won over by my revolutionary zeal, but instead she just stares at me, horrified. “You broke Trust law? In front of other Edenites?”

I'd just made it worse.

“This isn't only about being able to scrape by in the Badlands, Tess,” Ling says hotly. “We're revolutionaries. When we break the law, we do it anonymously. Not with an audience.”

I'm still standing there, dumbstruck, as Ling starts maneuvering her floater around me, muttering insults under her breath.


Ling!
I'm new to this. I made a mistake. I'm sorry, it won't happen
again. You want my ID? You can have it. I won't need it anymore. Because I want to join you. I want to stop Aevum. I want to help.”

She sits, unmoving.

“Why did you even come if you didn't trust me?” I ask, taking a few steps closer to her. “You know I'm legit, deep down you have to know. What you're asking me to do is huge. And I've already started. I broke up with my best friend, and I broke into Abel's lab—”

“What?”

“That's right!” I pounce on her interest. “I broke in last night. Magnus was down there. Abel is working on something, you were right.”

“Of course I was right.” She sniffs, but I can see I've hooked her. She's listening.

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