Read Remnants 14 - Begin Again Online

Authors: Katherine Alice Applegate

Remnants 14 - Begin Again (9 page)

 

“This is all very philosophical, but what’s the point?” Violet said suddenly. “We already assumed Billy was an essential element of the regreening ritual, right? So now it’s Billy and friends, big deal. And he told us straight out that the Source — whatever that is, exactly — is another essential part. What we still haven’t figured out is the third element.”

The depressing silence that followed Violet’s words was broken by the sudden appearance of Sanchez. His eyes shone and his breathing was heavy.

“What’s wrong?” Violet cried, reaching for his arm.

Sanchez shook his head. “Nothing. At least —”

“Sit down,” Olga urged. “Catch your breath.”

Sanchez sank to the ground. After a moment, he looked up and spoke. “Billy said the word

‘love,’ again, just as I felt —”

“What?” Jobs urged.

“I have no word for it,” Sanchez admitted. “But I have felt it before, from the Source. It reminds me of what I sense between Echo and the child. Between the other mothers and their children. Between j’ou, Olga, and Mo’Steel. Something very powerful. Something — inviolable.”

“Go on,” Mo’Steel said, kneeling awkwardly by Sanchez.

The storyteller’s voice trembled. “So I asked Billy a simple question. And he gave me a simple answer. So simple I am ashamed I didn’t understand before now.”

“What? Don’t keep us in suspense,” D-Caf cried.

Sanchez closed his eyes and took a deep breath. “The third element essential for the regreening ritual is the baby. Lumina.”

Violet grabbed Olga’s arm. Mo’Steel sucked in his breath, and D-Caf slapped his forehead.

“Then it’s solved!” Noyze cried.

Jobs looked at Sanchez’s bowed head and knew there was more.

“Not quite,” the storyteller admitted. “We must bring the baby to Billy. What I don’t understand is when. Billy spoke of a critical moment. When I asked him to tell me when that is, he said. The moment from which the voice was heard.’”

“Oh, great, another riddle!” Violet moaned. “What now, Billy?”

Olga rubbed her eyes. “Okay. We’ll figure it out. We can’t lose heart.”

“And we can’t miss Billy’s critical moment, either!”

Jobs looked at his companions and hesitated to speak. But he had to. “There’s something else,” he said calmly. “We have to ask Echo’s permission.”

Mo’Steel had called a general meeting. He said they had something critical to discuss.

Something about his tone made Echo concerned. She didn’t want to go to the meeting but there wasn’t exactly a way out of it Echo walked toward the gathering group. She held Lumina against her shoulder. The baby was still weak but with the advice and ministrations of the older women in the group, she was growing healthier. Echo smiled as Lumina lifted her head ever so slightly from her mother’s shoulder and gurgled. Lumina would never see her mother’s face and that broke Echo’s heart. But Lumina would know unending love.

Echo mingled with some of the women — Curia, the silent Yorka, dark-skinned Noyze —

and watched as the men and boys joined them.

A loud voice silenced the small talk around her. Mo’Steel and Sanchez stepped to the center of the rough circle.

 

“Sanchez has heard again from the Source,” Mo’Steel announced. Echo thought his expression was troubled, and her stomach went all funny.

Mo’Steel stepped away, and Sanchez looked slowly around the group. His head looked freshly shaved and his cheekbones were more prominent than usual, as if he’d been fasting,

“The Source has revealed to me,” he said with a hoarse voice, “the final element necessary for the regreening ritual. For the rebirth of our world.”

The holy man paused and Echo felt the combined anxiety of every Marauder, Alpha, and Remnant. She looked to Jobs and found that his eyes were downcast. She willed him to look up at her but —

“The three elements,” Sanchez went on. “The Source. The Five embodied in Billy. And —

the child called Lumina.”

There was dead silence for a second and then Echo sensed voices, movement, saw faces….

“No,” she said to no one. “No.”

Suddenly Echo realized she stood at the center of the group. She didn’t know how she happened to have gotten there.

Alone, at the center, with all eyes trained upon her and Lumina, expectant. Alphas, Marauders, Remnants.

Echo was afraid. Once again, she was the special one chosen for an important task. She hadn’t asked for this distinction. Nor had she asked to be chosen by the Alphas to bear a child for the colony. But she had accepted their decision and when, in their estimation, she had failed to do the job right, she’d been marked for murder.

Enforced starvation was murder.

And now?

“I… I don’t understand,” she blurted.

“None of us do,” Jobs admitted, finally looking at her “Not really.”

“What will happen to my baby?” she demanded of him.

There was more silence for her answer.

Involuntarily, Echo glanced at Newton. His eyes were dark with — with what? Hate?

Echo’s stomach clenched.

Olga took a step into the circle, smiling, one hand held out as if in peace. But Echo wanted nothing from any of them.

“J’ou stay back!” she cried, dashing to her right. D-Caf stepped back, startled, opening the circle, and Echo ran through.

“Echo! Please! Where are you going?”

It was Jobs, his tone concerned, pleading.

Echo halted. Breathing heavily, she turned to face the group. Alpha, Marauder, Remnant.

But her eyes held Jobs’s and his alone.

“I need time to think,” she called out. Her voice was surprisingly strong.

No,
Echo thought,
not
surprisingly. Have I come this far to protect my child, only to hand her
over to these

strangers

now? No.

Jobs’s frustration was clear but finally, he nodded. Echo turned and walked off.

CHAPTER 15

“YOU’VE JUST MADE ME AN ACCESSORY TO YOUR CRIME.”

There was something he hadn’t told them.

Something Billy had communicated that last time, something Sanchez had kept to himself.

It was killing him to keep it a secret any longer. Even though the message had been enigmatic —

Billy’s energy had been draining badly — Sanchez knew he had to unburden himself or go insane.

He sought out Violet. He found her sitting alone, staring off into nothing.

“What are j’ou doing?” he asked.

“Don’t you even say hello?” Violet looked up at him and smiled. “If you must know, I’m thinking about when I was little. I pick a year of my childhood and I try to remember as much as I can about it.

Good and bad. Memories are all I have of — before. All any of us have.”

Sanchez hesitated. Maybe now was not the time …

“We must talk,” he blurted.

“About what?”

Violet got to her feet. Sanchez noted how thin the girl had gotten.

“About something I know.”

Violet rolled her eyes. “You know, it’s like pulling teeth with you, Sanchez. Don’t you ever just get to the point?”

Sanchez frowned. “Pulling teeth?”

“Forget it. It’s an expression. Just tell me what you have to tell me.”

Sanchez closed his eyes for a moment, then opened them and looked steadily at Violet.

“When Billy told me that Lumina was the third essential element for the regreening ritual, he also told me something else. Something — disturbing.”

Violet’s blue eyes grew dark. “What?”

“Billy told me there is a possibility the ritual won’t work.”

Violet smiled and looked massively relieved. “Is that all?” she said. “I’ve always considered that possibility. So, what happens? We live out the rest of our lives in the desert?”

Suddenly, Sanchez wished he could hold Violet’s hands as he told her the ugly truth. But he resisted the temptation. “We don’t live at all,” he said. “Earth is destroyed. As are we.”

Violet took a step away from him and folded her arms across her chest. “Okay, now you’re scaring me.”

“I have kept this information to myself for a reason,” Sanchez explained calmly, though inside, he was flooded again with self-doubt. “What if I am wrong? What if I misunderstood Billy’s warning?

What if there is no possibility of failure? If I tell, I might be creating panic for no reason. I will be adding a terrible complication to an already confusing situation. My words might frighten the people into refusing to trust and act with Billy.”

“Then why tell me now?” Violet cried. “Sanchez…”

The strength of Violet’s reaction did not bother Sanchez as much as it once might have. He was learning. He was changing all the time.

“I don’t know,” he admitted.

Violet sighed and ran her hands over her wild hair “You’ve just made me an accessory to your crime.

Do you realize that? Even if it was a crime of omission. Now I share your burden. Thanks.”

She shared his burden ….
Yes,
Sanchez thought.
That’s why I told her. I wanted

needed?

her to
share my burden.

 

“We have to tell Mo’Steel NOW,” Violet said, grabbing Sanchez’s arm, Sanchez felt the strength of Violet’s fingers through his dirty clothing. They were slim but powerful.

“Does he need to know?” he said.

Sanchez watched as several emotions registered in Violet’s blue eyes.

Finally her grip lessened and she stepped back from him again. “Are you going to try to stop me from telling?” she asked, her tone challenging.

“No,” Sanchez admitted. “I’m asking j’ou a question for which I have no answer.”

Violet was silent for a moment. Then, she began to pace. To talk to herself, not to him.

“How realistic is it,” she said, “to expect uneducated, barely civilized people …”

Sanchez winced. Violet meant the Marauders, of course. Maybe not Sanchez specifically, but still, hearing her opinion of his people stung.

“How can they make a rational decision about their future?” Violet went on. “Isn’t it really up to us, to me and Jobs and the others, isn’t it really up to us to make that decision for them? Maybe it’s for the best that we don’t tell anyone else about the possibility of failure….”

Violet came to an abrupt halt and looked back at Sanchez. Did she see the pain in his eyes, he wondered.

Her voice now was strained. “Sanchez, do you hear what I’m saying? It’s horrible! I don’t want to play. I can’t! Who am I that I should even be considering shouldering the responsibility of…”

Violet clutched her head.

“I’m sorry I told j’ou,” Sanchez said.

Violet laughed. “No you’re not. But it’s okay It’s okay. If it were the other way around, I wouldn’t have been able to keep it to myself,” she admitted. “Just — what now?”

Sanchez hesitated. He hoped he was doing the right thing but he had no way of knowing.

“I think we should continue to keep this to ourselves.”

“You do?”

“Yes.”

Sanchez waited for Violet’s opinion. His heart slammed in his chest.

Finally she sighed and said, “Okay. We’re agreed. We keep this information to ourselves. At least for now.”

Sanchez nodded, knowing all too well that nothing had been solved. That he — and now Violet —

was still guilty in some way. “Yes,” he said. “At least for now.”

Jobs looked around at his companions and wondered why they didn’t just all shut up. What was the use of talking anyway? Okay, maybe he was just in a bad mood, but it looked pretty likely that the regreening ritual wasn’t going to happen.

Still, he listened as he chewed a tasteless leaf of some sort. What else did he have to do?

“Billy must tell Echo nothing bad will happen to the child,” Aga was insisting.

“I don’t think he can do that,” Olga replied. “I don’t think he knows exactly what will happen during the ritual.”

“That’s right. He only tells us what he knows for certain. I think.” Noyze groaned. “It’s so frustrating that he communicates only through Sanchez! And even Sanchez isn’t sure he’s getting the messages right.”

“Revelation isn’t supposed to be as easy as reading the back of a cereal box,” Violet said, sarcasm heavy in her tone.

Hey,
Jobs thought, shooting her an amused glance.
Violet sounds just like I feel.

Noyze frowned at them both.

“Sorry,” Violet said. “I didn’t mean to make light of this….”

 

Jobs tuned out and pretended to contemplate his ratty shoes. What he was really thinking about was his extreme unwillingness to let Echo’s innocent baby be harmed or die in the service of others. Sure, he wanted a green world, but who was he to ask a mother to risk her child’s life? Was he any better than Lumina? Was his life —or the life of anyone else on this stinking planet — more valuable than any other?

“So — we’ve solved nothing, right?” Olga said, her voice loud enough with frustration to bring Jobs around. “Just in case I’m missing something here …”

“It’s not up to us to solve anything,” Jobs said suddenly. “It’s up to Echo to say yes.”

An uneasy silence followed, broken finally by Violet.

“Let’s say Echo does agree. If we don’t identify the critical moment for the ritual soon …”

Jobs smiled grimly. “It’s sticks and berries forever.”

CHAPTER 16

“J’OU WILL REGRET THIS NEW WORLD!”

It was almost too easy. The Alpha girl got up to do her business away from the sleeping area.

And she left her baby behind! Wedged In between an old woman — Aga — and a little kid —

Walbert.

Newton was big but he was stealthy. As soon as Snipe turned away from the sleeping area to check on the Source, he made his move.

He slipped in among the women and children and snatched up the tiny bundle that was Echo’s baby.

And without Echo’s baby, Mo’Steel and Sanchez and all the others would have no chance of getting their stupid green world.

Nimbly, Newton leaped over the sleepers and ran full speed until he got out of easy sight.

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