She didn’t respond, but I could tell that she agreed. I almost asked her if she was a real doctor, or maybe had some basic knowledge and that had been enough to get that title bestowed on her, but kept my trap shut. No need to antagonize the woman who, quite possibly, got to decide whether they’d throw me out in a minute or two, or let me stay.
“You’ve seen war. That much is obvious,” she finally went on while I got busy scrubbing what was left of my toes. I stiffened, not sure if I should correct her—or whether there was a need to—but she went on before I could come to any conclusions. “I know what those three marks really mean. I don’t mean the walking-bomb part—nobody’s that superstitious here. Most of us are alive only because of someone with high endurance and immunity, and we are grateful for that. But I know what you very likely did to get them.”
Anger wanted to flicker up my spine and make me spew something stupid, but for once asking myself what Nate would have told her helped me keep a moderately calm demeanor. The irony of that wasn’t lost on me. “And your point is?”
She actually laughed at my cool tone, irritating me further, until I realized that I’d, somehow, broken the ice. “I’m not passing judgment,” she assured me, although her tone was laced with too much sarcasm to be completely honest. “But, after all that, why would you mark yourself up like some imposter fangirl? You can’t seriously believe in all the crap people tell themselves when they think those in charge aren’t watching.”
And that’s where she lost me. Not even my cool stare could get me out of that situation, and I got the sense that letting her know I was oblivious was not a good idea. So I left it at a tart, “It’s often hard to know all the sides to what went down. And sometimes the simple truth is that even good people make stupid decisions.” I hoped to hell that this statement was confusing and vague enough to work as an answer.
I was surprised that it did, although it made the doctor shake her head. “That’s true.” She paused before she got up, but didn’t leave quite yet. “Don’t make us regret letting you in. We really don’t care about people’s ideologies as long as they don’t force them upon us. I hope you can hold yourself to that standard as well?”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about.” And that wasn’t even a lie.
She smiled, if tightly. “Exactly.” She then gestured in the vague direction of the center of the settlement. “Once you’re refreshed, come find me in the village square. We’ll get you a place to sleep and make sure you’re well fed. You can wash your clothes here and hang them up over there. Nobody will touch them.”
That was a strange reassurance if I’d ever heard one but I thanked her nevertheless, happy to finally be on my own again. Damn, but people could be draining sometimes.
Even though I only got half of what was going on, I couldn’t really complain. So far everything seemed to proceed splendidly. What could possibly go wrong?
Judging from history, I was minutes away from a full-blown disaster—but I hoped disaster would wait until I got some stew into my stomach. I figured I deserved at least that much.
Chapter 7
The shit didn’t hit the fan before I got some stew—beef, which was a very welcome change to my usual diet—and freshly-baked bread into my stomach. Also not before I got some time to socialize with the natives, who turned out to be pretty relaxed about my presence, used to traders and mercenaries as they were. I was downright antsy by the time most people got ready to hit the sack, and still the other shoe hadn’t dropped. It was downright frightening how boring and uneventful my time in the settlement started out.
There were no poisonous spiders hiding in the sheets on the mattress in the otherwise empty guest dormitory. No one sneaked in to strangle me in my sleep. By the time the doctor dropped in to fetch me for breakfast, I was ready to jump at shadows. This was beyond weird. How dare people be actually honest and nice to someone who didn’t even have a chance to become a nuisance to them? The gall!
I didn’t let my guard down, and that was probably the reason why no one tried to mess with me. Even to me it was obvious that I acted like a caged animal—and that was ignoring the shakes and spasms that still plagued me, particularly in the morning after hours of inactivity. The doctor kept watching me closely, and eventually, I asked her to check on my nose and right hand, telling her I’d broken both months ago. If she really knew as much about the serum project as she claimed, she probably saw right through my lie but didn’t comment on it. The nose she declared as slightly crooked but okay if I didn’t mind the optics; I didn’t, quite happy not to have bloody sniffles for days again. I could tell that my hand in its general state upset her—she couldn’t hide her discomfort once I took the gloves off again, but valiantly tried nevertheless—but after carefully prodding every inch of my fingers declared she couldn’t really do much without an X-ray machine—and didn’t think there still existed an operating one of those. I didn’t correct her about it and instead listened to her verdict.
“You will very likely regain full functionality once everything is healed completely. But such things take time.” The pause that followed was a pregnant one. “What you’re really wanting to know is how long the withdrawal will last, right?”
My confusion must have been quite plain, but for whatever reason, that made her fleeting compassion turn to vexation once more. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” I insisted. She gave me a rather hard, “Yeah, right,” look. “I really don’t. Lady, if you know as much about us as you say, you know that it takes a damn potent drug to even affect us. Trust me when I say that I really, really wished at one point in my life that painkillers were still doing a thing for me, but they don’t. And correct me if I’m wrong, most of the recreational shit is chemically pretty close to that.” I almost got into the structural specifics but stopped myself before I could out myself as someone I pretended not to be. Plus, the cursing seemed to throw her off as well.
“Right. And that tells me that whatever you’ve been abusing must have been some darn potent stuff,” she snarled, badly imitating my voice. “When did you take your last hit? Just before coming here? Or is the reason you ended up here because your people cut you off? That would explain why we haven’t gotten any news yet.”
My mouth was already open in protest but then something occurred to me. “You know something you’re not telling me.”
“Oh, I know a lot of things,” she huffed, narrowing her eyes at me.
“I’m not lying,” I insisted again, then looked around to make sure no one was close enough to eavesdrop. “And I think you know that. But you have seen similar things before. That’s why you don’t trust me. Tell me, what was it?”
“I will do no such thing,” she protested, but some of her ire had already transformed to curiosity. “Why should I, if you’re just a lying junkie?”
“What if I’m not?” Leaning closer, I made sure to catch her gaze and hold it, which made her mighty uncomfortable all of a sudden. “What if it wasn’t my choice to be drugged? What if I’m actually a victim and survivor? What do you think I’d do to someone who I suspected knew something about the people who victimized me?”
I didn’t get off on scaring people, and seeing her blanch like that didn’t give me any satisfaction. But if it got me answers—or even mere suspicions, which was more than I had at the moment—I really didn’t give a shit what I’d have to do.
“I—” she stuttered, blinking rapidly. “I don’t know anything.” The “know” she stressed hard enough that it only took a sharp look from me for her to spill the beans. “But there have been rumors. Mostly friend of a friend stuff. About recreational drugs that someone manufactures that actually do work on your kind. Tales of smuggling, and some more unsavory stuff.”
“You mean like forced prostitution and slave labor?”
“Lord, no!” she gasped, at first offended by perceived implications, until a possible alternative to the meaning of my words occurred to her. I knew the moment
she came to the right conclusion—well, mostly right—when pity took over her face once more.
Before she could speak up, I quickly shook my head. “Not me, but—” I really didn’t know how much to tell her, and it wasn’t just a matter of trust. I didn’t know how far this thing reached, and the last thing I needed was to get someone killed just because I’d confided in them. “Someone close to me,” I settled on saying. “But believe me when I tell you, I didn’t take that shit willingly.”
She nodded, although I could tell that she didn’t quite believe me. Right now, that was something I could live with. “I don’t know anything about the compound. Just that it exists.” She weighed her options carefully before offering, “Maybe your friends in the west know more about that.”
I was shaking my head before I realized I was doing it, making myself stop. True, there weren’t many things I didn’t think Greene capable of, but this was too much even for him. “As I told your husband already, I don’t have any friends in New Angeles.”
“I didn’t say—”
“Is there anything else but that godforsaken town in California?” I griped—doing my best to throw her off again.
She gave me another one of those offended looks but appeared calmer once she opened her mouth to reply. “I wouldn’t know as I don’t lead a nomadic life. But what I do know is that nothing good comes of this. If one of your friends is caught up in this, I’m sorry. We’ve heard a few reports about people disappearing. It’s not safe to the east.”
That sounded about right. Too bad I only now heard of this apparently being common knowledge.
But didn’t that raise another question? “Why isn’t anyone doing anything about this?”
My question seemed to actually stun her. “Why indeed?” she offered as if that was answer enough. Huh. I was still mulling this over long after she’d gotten up and left me to my own devices. Somehow I got the sense I was missing a big part of the picture, and I doubted I’d find the answers here.
I was still thinking about this when Steven signaled me to join him. “Good news! We got some of your friends on the line.”
That was quick, although I did my best not to show my surprise. “That’s great! What did they say?”
“They will be here later today to pick you up.” Now that I hadn’t expected, and this time I was too slow to hide my reaction. “Something wrong?” he inquired, suddenly suspicious.
“It’s probably nothing,” I tried to assure him. “I just didn’t expect anyone to get here this quickly.”
He was still squinting, but in a less hostile way. “They said about the same. Dispatch confirmed that they were already signed in for the trip to California for the past couple of days. Must have gotten turned around. Or they were still looking for you.”
I absolutely hoped that wasn’t the case but I couldn’t very well explain that now since it perfectly matched the bullshit I’d dished out yesterday. Oh well—as they said, only one way to find out? But why, oh why, did I feel like, finally, that other shoe was dangling right above my head?
I tried to rest some more—which was a different way of saying that I was hiding from the people in the settlement, feeling a little overwhelmed after so much time on my own. I could sure use some sleep, but my mind wouldn’t shut up now that my alertness was triggered. I was also missing Nate like crazy, which seemed idiosyncratic at first since out there not having him around had been way more inconvenient than now, but that was probably the reason why—now that I’d let down my guard, even if only a little, the events of the past days were catching up with me. I almost laughed at how alone I could feel with hundreds of people around, while out on the road I’d been mostly okay.
Way too soon—or not soon enough for my agitated paranoia—Steven sent someone to tell me to get ready. I met him at the gate a few minutes later, busy stowing the last provisions away that I’d been handed—food for two days, and I’d refilled all my water bottles, even those scavenged from the bike shop. I got my rifle back, and Steven watched with a bemused look as I checked it over, then made sure that I had a round in the chamber. “Expecting trouble?”
I left it at a simple shrug. “So many things out there that can kill you. I didn’t survive this long by being stupid.”
Someone called down from the palisade that the caravan was arriving—apparently, my taxi had been hitching a ride with them, providing additional protection. I couldn’t help but hope that I wouldn’t have to shoot anyone in the face as soon as that gate was open. Guards all over were getting ready, but their generally relaxed state made me guess it was more for show and to help with hauling cargo from and to the vehicles than to make sure the settlement wasn’t invaded.
I couldn’t wait to be out of here and find someone who could—finally!—explain to me what was going on.
Steven and five other guards joined me at the gate to wait for the inner part to open. Apparently with more strangers outside they went through the usual procedures, locking us in for a good minute between the doors before the outer one creaked open. I forced myself to relax and clear my mind, prepared to do whatever would help my survival. If I recognized anyone from that damn camp, I’d try to alert the good people of Sweet Water; if it was anyone else gunning for me, I’d make a break for the next available cover and then get the hell out of here, hopefully avoiding civilian casualties. But, who knew? Maybe I really was just paranoid. Maybe those would be familiar faces waiting for me that I’d yearned to see, with all my heart, for months and months on end? That would cut down my calculated timeframes as well.
Convenient indeed, and highly unlikely, I told myself. Keep calm and roll with the punches.
Then the gate was finally out of the way and let me get a glimpse at my transport. I couldn’t hold in a short bark of laughter when I saw it—and who was waiting in front of it. “You got to be fucking kidding me,” I muttered to myself—but with the hint of a smile. I wasn’t quite ready to put away my rifle yet, but it could have been worse.
“Not quite who you were expecting?” Steven asked, studying what had caught my attention himself.
“Not really,” I admitted.
“You expecting any problems?” he went on.
I shook my head, if after a moment of deliberation. “Probably not. Nothing I can’t deal with.”
The guards around us had all snapped to attention upon seeing who the additional guard for the caravan was, and one of them gave me a weird look. “Who the fuck are you that they play pick-up service for you?”
“Wouldn’t you like to know?” I quipped in his direction, but since Steven seemed to wonder about that himself—and I didn’t want anyone to shoot me in the back once I started walking over there—I answered, leaning conspiratorially closer to Steven. “I really don’t have a clue what happened to this country over the past couple of years, but you can tell your wife that she knows who I am. She’s seen my tats. There are only two women in the entire world entitled to that tattoo, and nobody would ever confuse me with her. Tell her I’m the real deal.”
That said, I nodded to all of them, and started walking toward the Humvee idling at the side of the road.
Chapter 8
I might not have been afraid for my life as I approached the vehicle, but a million different reasons zoomed through my head why they, of all people, were here. The most likely was that I was seconds away from hearing some kind of ultimatum or other that I absolutely didn’t like—but I had to admit, if it got me help with getting Nate back, my threshold for what I was okay with was rather high.
It could have been worse. Honestly, when I’d seen the Humvee, my immediate fear had been that I’d have to deal with Hamilton again—although that would have made hunting him down so I could eviscerate him much, much easier.
Still, I much preferred to see Richards, Cole, and Hill standing by the armored vehicle.
There was also some other guy I didn’t know hovering beside them. If he was much older than eighteen, I’d be damned.
He also obviously had no idea who I was since he kept eyeing me with amusement and the other three with something akin to confusion. So they must have told him something, but not everything.
That begged the question—what on earth were they doing here?
“Don’t tell me it’s coincidence for you to show up here,” I offered instead of a conventional greeting. Just because I might have been willing to cooperate with them didn’t mean I had to show it.
I got a tight grin from Cole and a snort from Hill, while Richards crossed his arms over his chest. “Nice to see you, too,” Red shot back, calm as always.
I hated to admit it, but seeing the three of them here made me realize that, on some level, I’d missed them, too.
“I’m sure it is,” I drawled back. “Cut the crap. Why are you here? And before we have to dance through an entirely necessary conversation, yes, I’m still paranoid as hell, and no, I still won’t trust you if your answer involves the term ‘classified.’”
Richards considered—which meant he knew exactly what information he was ready to divulge but was letting me stew without admitting as much—before he pushed away from the Humvee, still the picture of lack of concern. Sure, I didn’t have my rifle at the ready anymore, and it was unlikely I’d try anything with the caravan and settlement guards close by, but he knew what I was capable of—probably more so than any of the others. The new guy sure seemed to be bursting with curiosity but didn’t dare speak up. Sheesh, how was I going to survive that? He’d probably start “ma’am”ing me in under ten seconds flat.
“You missed a drop-off date so I figured I should come investigate why,” Richards explained, confusing me both because it did sound honest, and I had no clue what he was talking about—but I could guess.
My answering smile couldn’t have been very warm—or friendly. “Come again?”
Red didn’t even grimace as he kept staring at me, unmoved. “He didn’t tell you.”
Green Fields Series Box Set | Vol. 4 | Books 10-12 Page 10