Read Tabula Rasa Kristen Lippert Martin Online
Authors: Kristen Lippert-Martin,ePUBator - Minimal offline PDF to ePUB converter for Android
“That right?”
“Yes. And that’s why I know you’re lying to me. You
think it will somehow make me feel better, like it did for
him.” He points to Elmer’s body. “Something terrible hap-
pened to you.”
I look at Thomas. I am empty. The world is no place I
want to be right now.
“Tell me,” he says. “Trust me.”
“She killed her.”
“Wait, who killed who?”
“The woman I told you about, the one we heard on
the radio. She’s the one who’s running this whole opera-
tion. She killed my mother, ran her down like a dog in the
street, and now she’s coming after me.”
“What?”
He puts his hand on my cheek, and I let my face fall into
his palm, let my head rest against his hand. I feel his hand
start to shake and I lift my head up, but I can’t quite bring
myself to look at him. My nose starts to run. I wipe it on
my sleeve and swallow the hot lump in my throat, trying
to make words come out.
“She works for Erskine Claymore.”
“Claymore? But that’s . . . it doesn’t make any sense.
Why would he wipe out a project that he funded? And
what’s it got to do with you?”
“I don’t know! Maybe he’s just angry because I made
him look bad.” I look up and scream. “She killed my
mother, Thomas!”
261
“Oh, Angel. Oh . . . I just . . . I wish . . . ”
I hug my knees to my chest. I feel Thomas’s hand on my
head, but then it falls away and I look up. He’s in bad shape.
“I’m so sorry,” he says. “What can I do? What can I say?
I’ll do anything.”
“I know nothing can bring my mother back, but I hate
that woman. And I hate her most of all for making me
remember how much I loved my mother and how she died
in the same exact moment.”
I don’t tell him about Claymore being my father. I
think I don’t say anything because I don’t want to believe
it. I don’t want to think that there’s any of him running
through me. For some reason that helps me stand and pull
myself together.
“You’re in pain,” I say.
“A bit. I guess that painkiller is wearing off.” He points
to the cord I’ve dropped on the floor. “Did you find any
power?”
“I did.”
I hand him the cord attached to the battery, and as he
plugs it into the laptop, I tell him how many people died
to bring that to him. Not to make him feel guilty. But he
should know.
“You better have the best hacking day of your life.”
Hours pass. I don’t know how many. I nod off at one point
and awaken to the clacking of fingers on a keyboard. I feel
a hand stroke my cheek, and I drift back asleep. I dream
262
that I’m still in my hospital bed, and the bed is sitting in a
field of white. Everything is white. The sky, the ground, all
of it. I’m frightened by it. Terrified. How can there be such
nothingness all around me? Suddenly Jori appears at my
bedside. Her blond hair is long, and she’s wearing a red bow
in it. I tell her she is beautiful, and she says, “Yes, I am.”
She’s holding a crayon in her hand. She sits on the ground
and starts to draw. “It’s paper,” she says, looking around at
the whiteness. “Blank paper. Come and draw with me.” I
tell her I’m not a very good artist, but she says I can write
a story instead. Any story I want. I tell her I don’t like this
white world. It’s so empty. She smiles. “Not empty. Blank.
Full of possibility.” She holds the crayon up again and tells
me, “I can fix your broken wing if you’d like.”
I tell her no. No one can fix my wings for me.
She puts her finger to my lips and sings, “Be true. Be
true. Be true.”
It’s all crazy Jori talk.
When I wake, I don’t open my eyes for a long, blissful
moment. I could be anywhere. I can tell I’ve slept a long
time. My limbs are heavy.
“You shouldn’t have let me sleep. Those guys could be
here any second.”
“Don’t worry. I’ve kept our mercenary friends busy for
the last few hours, setting off alarms all over the building.”
I sit up and lean into him. He winces, and I pull back.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to hurt you.” I cross my arms over
my chest. “It feels colder in here.”
263
“Is it?”
When I can focus my eyes again, I look at Thomas. He
doesn’t look well. I lean over and put my hand to his fore-
head; he pulls away.
“You’re burning up.”
“Yeah,” he says, still staring intently at the screen. “I’m
sure that’s all kinds of bad.”
He stops and looks up at me. I can’t read his expres-
sion. He could say anything right now and nothing would
surprise me.
“I love you.”
I was wrong about that.
“I assume you’re trying to make me laugh. Which isn’t
very funny.”
“No, I have a reason for saying it. A selfish one.”
“You have a selfish reason for saying that you love me?”
“I have a weird bucket list, and that one was right at the
very top. I never said it to anyone before, and I wanted to
say it to someone before I died.”
“You’re not going to die.”
“Odds are not looking good.”
“I’m not talking about this anymore.”
“Okay.”
“What happened while I was asleep? Did you find any-
thing useful?”
“Have a look.”
He turns the laptop toward me, and suddenly I realize
that he’s leaning on me to keep from tipping over. “Maybe
you should lie down.”
264
“Okay.”
He lets me lay him on the floor. I hover over him and
stuff the blood-streaked pillow under his head. He looks
sleepy now, like he’s having trouble staying with me.
“So how did it feel?” I ask.
“How did what feel?”
“Saying ‘I love you.’”
“Oh. It was fine. I mean, awkward, but it wasn’t as scary
as I thought it would be. Here, I’ll say it again.” He looks
me in the eye and says softly, “I love you.”
I look away. “Okay, now you’re just showing off.”
He smiles at me, but I know he’s faking. He’s in pain
and it’s getting harder and harder for him to cover it up. I
reposition the pillow just as a way to divert attention from
my own embarrassment.
“Well, I’m glad you said it,” I say.
“Yeah? How come?”
“For a selfish reason. Because I doubt I’m going to hear
anybody tell me that ever. Whether we die here or not.”
“You really are brain-damaged, aren’t you?”
“Hey!”
He sucks in a breath between his teeth and licks his lips
before saying softly, “Let me explain something to you,
Angel. There are two kinds of girls in this world: the kind
that guys find it easy to say ‘I love you’ to and the kind guys
find it nearly impossible to tell. You’re the second kind of
girl.”
“I think I already knew that.”
“You don’t understand. See, when a guy is afraid to tell
265
a girl he loves her, it’s because what he feels scares the crap
out of him. Some girls inspire fear; others don’t.”
“I’m scary. Well, that’s nice to hear.”
“Angel, you’re not getting what I’m saying . . . .”
I feel stung. I don’t want to have this conversation any-
more. When I look down at my arm for the tablet, I realize
that Thomas must have removed it while I was sleeping. It’s
lying on the floor, and the screen is black.
He sees me searching for the tablet and shakes his head.
“It’s useless to us now. But that’s okay, because I just
discovered something about portable mainframes. They
are easier to hack than you might think. Hacking into a
system designed to hack into other systems—that’s like a
double negative. Anyway, we’ll still be able to see them on
the security cameras now.”
“That’s good news.”
“Yes. But as you are no doubt aware by now, good news
usually comes with bad news.”
“What’s the bad news?”
“There’s only one place you’re going to get another
pill.”
I close my eyes. “Of course.”
“Getting up to the sixth floor is not going to be easy,”
he says.
I let out an unhappy little chuckle. The idea of carrying
on against these odds is completely laughable. Getting up
three floors took four lives and almost cost me mine. Now
I’m going to go twice as far? By myself?
266
“Thomas. Come on. It’s over, and we both know it. I’m
not going to get that pill in time. And even if I did, I’m
probably not going to get out of here alive.”
“I don’t want to hear that from you! You are going to
get what you need. I’m going to help you. I don’t care if
you want to give up. You can tell yourself you’re doing this
for me now. Whatever it takes. Listen. There are seventy-
two security cameras in this building. I’m going to scroll
through all of them. You’ll see four angles per screen. Tell
me when you see something interesting; I’m going to have
a little rest.” He closes his eyes and lets his head tip back
against the wall.
I watch as the images go by. Some cameras show static;
some only display black. After twenty or so, I see the main
lobby appear in the upper corner. My eyes pass over it for a
moment, but then I think I catch sight of something mov-
ing on the floor.
“Wait.”
Thomas takes his hand away from the keyboard.
“It’s Steve!”
“Who?”
I’m still trying to get over being pissed that he tried
to hand me over to the soldiers, but when I see what he’s
doing, it makes it a little easier to let that go. He’s pulling
his huge body across the floor, inch by inch, leaving a trail
of blood; he’s moving toward the security guard’s desk.
“I think I know where he’s going. There! See. On the
wall. That’s the panic button.”
267
Thomas does a weak, sleepy cheer and replies, “Can’t
get here soon enough. I hope they bring balloons and lots
of painkillers.”
In another shot I see more movement. There are four
soldiers, rifles in hand, making their way toward a stairwell.
The next camera angle shows them walking downstairs.
They’re one floor above the main lobby. I watch as they
continue to descend.
“No,” I say. “No, no, no.”
“What?”
“They’re going to the lobby,” I say. “They’re heading
straight for him.”
We watch Steve’s progress across the floor. He’s using his
elbows to move his big frame across the marble, brushing
aside glass pellets as he goes. It’s excruciating, like watching
some inhumane sport.
I keep looking and then looking away. Steve’s got sec-
onds before the soldiers come through the door. Slowly,
slowly, he inches along, his hands trembling each time he
pulls himself forward. He collapses after each effort and
then somehow finds a way to keep going.
He just needs a little more time.
“Where’s that radio?” I ask.
“What radio?”
“The one we took off the soldier who fell into the exca-
vation pit.”
“I don’t know. It’s still in the pack, I think.”
I find it and turn it on.
268
“Hello? Hello? Can anyone hear me?”
The soldiers on the screen stop and look around.
“Seems you got their attention.”
Steve is still three feet away from the button, and it
looks like his strength is giving out.
“Angel,” a voice coos over the radio. “I thought we
agreed we weren’t going to do long, drawn-out good-byes.
It’s uncomfortable for everyone. I’m still hoping we can
just shoot you and be on our way.”
“I remember,” I say to her.
“Do you? Tut, tut, tut. That’s got to be very hard on
you.”
As I take my thumb off the radio button, Thomas says,
“Tell her you know what they did to you.”
“What?”
“Tell her you know what Buckley did.”
I look at the monitor. Steve’s reached the guard’s desk.
He’s stretching toward the wall, flailing blindly for the but-
ton. He pulls himself up, falls, pulls himself up again. The
four soldiers are running down the stairs toward the lobby.
“Come on, come on,” I say to the computer screen, try-
ing to egg Steve on.
“Keep talking,” Thomas says. His skin has gone gray,
and his eyes are glassy. “Tell her you have what she wants.”
“What do I have that she wants?”
“The data. Tell her you have all the research on the
Velocius project. By now they’ve probably figured out that
it’s gone.”
269
I press the radio button. “I have what you want.”
I hear a hiss and a beep. Then Hodges’s voice.
“I’m sure you don’t have what I want, not unless you’ve
got some size-six-and-a-half Jimmy Choos with you. No,
be assured that the only thing I want right now is you,
dead, preferably killed in a violent manner.”
Thomas shakes his head. He’s in agony. “Go on. Tell
her you have the data 8-Bit took. About the Velocius proj-
ect. Say it.”
I echo Thomas even though I don’t understand. There’s
no response for a long time. I wonder if the radio has cut
out. After a minute, I repeat what I said. Suddenly we hear
a humming sound, and all the lights come on. The bright-
ness stings my eyes. I’ve never been so unhappy to see light.
I feel like a hole has formed in my chest and the rest of me
is falling into it.
“Guess they figured out where we are,” Thomas says.
I look at the computer screen. Steve has collapsed onto
the floor, his arm still extended toward the desk, inches
from the button. A soldier with a smoking rifle is standing
over him.
“That’s really, really freaking discouraging,” Thomas
says.
I turn my radio off and take the computer from his lap.
“I’m going after her.”
“No, you’re not. Not yet, anyway. Not until you get
that last pill. Then you can kill her all you want. Please,
Angel. Please don’t leave me right now. I mean . . . let’s see
270
what else we can find out first.”
Thomas slumps down and takes his glasses off. They fall
from his hand onto the floor. “I need to rest my eyes for a
minute. You look.”
I continue pressing the “enter” key, trawling through
the camera angles for something helpful. After a few
screens, I see a man tied to a desk chair.
“Thomas.”
He doesn’t respond. I slap his cheeks lightly and he looks
up, momentarily alert. I point to the man on the screen.
“8-Bit,” he says, leaning forward, his eyes unfocused.
“Can we hear what they’re saying?”
“No, I checked. The surveillance cameras are just
images, no sound. Including that external feed I found ear-
lier.”
On the screen we see that 8-Bit’s head is hanging limply
to the side, and at first I think he’s dead, but then he moves
and starts to speak.
“Where is he?” I ask.
He reads the location of the security camera. “Director’s
office, first floor.”
Suddenly Hodges comes into view. My whole body
tenses up. We watch as she slowly approaches 8-Bit, saun-
tering toward him with her fists on her hips. 8-Bit smiles
at her.
She tucks her hair behind her ear and then backhands
him across the face.
He looks up and smiles at her again. Like he finds her
271