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The Harvest

Page 15

by K. Makansi


  “The resurrection will be ours,” Soren and Osprey say in sync, looking wide-eyed at the crowd as the chant goes around, not loud but forceful, with the same rhythm and cadence as the beat Vale was tapping out just moments ago.

  The resurrection will be ours.

  And then it’s over.

  Vale stays next to the drum as the vigil keepers begin murmuring amongst themselves, some taking their leave, some gathering into small groups. I stand as Meera comes up to me and kisses my cheek.

  “That was beautiful, Remy,” she says. “The Sector may say you’re the face of the Resistance, but today you proved you’re really the face of the Resurrection.”

  Meera reaches for my hand as another vigil keeper approaches: the girl with the phoenix. She stops and looks at me with a terrifying ferocity, the red plumage painted around her eyes making her all the more frightening. She glances over at Soren and Osprey and then back to me.

  “My name is Saara. I know who you are, Remy Alexander. I want to fight with you.”

  “Who are you?” I demand, awestruck by her paint and by her presence.

  “I’m Hana Lyon’s sister.”

  Soren turns at the mention of Hana’s name. He leaves Osprey’s side and walks over to us.

  “You threw seeds for my sister,” Saara says, watching him. “How did you know her?”

  “I loved her,” Soren says. “Young love, but love nonetheless.”

  Meera and I take Saara’s hands.

  “Welcome to the Resistance,” I murmur.

  13 - VALE

  Spring 79, Sector Annum 106, 11h00

  Gregorian Calendar: June 6

  I watch from afar as the girl with the phoenix paint walks up to Remy and Meera. Still awed by the vigil’s power, I try to keep my feet on the ground and process what I just witnessed. Instead of joining Remy, I focus on cleaning up, gathering the remaining seeds, and packing up the few things we brought.

  When I turn back around, Meera’s gone, but Remy and Soren are still talking to the girl. I opt to stay out of the conversation, choosing instead to sit by the stream and wait. After about ten minutes, I feel a hand on my shoulder, fingers pressing into my tired muscles.

  “Meera’s going back to Bunqu’s to clean up,” Remy says as I stand. “She has to go into work. Said a few people called in sick, that there must be some kind of bug going around. She’ll meet us later.”

  “Who is that girl?” I ask.

  “Her name is Saara Lyon.” Her eyes light up with excitement. “Hana Lyon’s sister. She wants to join the Resistance. Today. She says she has a bag packed and everything.” I realize what this must mean to Remy, to know there is someone else out there who knows what she’s been through, who can understand and empathize completely.

  “How did she know Rachel?”

  “She’s a nurse. She took care of Miah’s mom when she was turned into a lab rat during the blight that went around when we were at the Academy. She did her research and realized it was all connected.” To my parents, I think, my head swimming. “She’s been waiting for a chance to get in touch with someone from the Resistance for months.”

  “Remy,” I say, pressure building in my chest, constricting my throat. The feeling of being underwater, tumbling under waves, grows with every passing second. “What you did today was amazing.”

  I can’t take my eyes off her. As she turns to me, her presence is like gravity, pulling me to her as effortlessly as the earth keeps my feet on the ground.

  “I couldn’t have done it by myself.” She leans in to me. “What would we have done without your drumming?”

  She turns to leave, but I stay where I am, my feet rooted to that spot. I take her hands in mine. Her eyes are as rich as the earth.

  “Remy, the vigil was inspiring. But I’m not talking about that. I’m talking about you.” Something changed today, watching her lead the ceremony. I’ve been chasing her for almost four years now, this girl, but today she became more than just a girl. “You are my compass, my guide. I’m in love with you.”

  She stares at me for a long time before responding, but the silence between us is as peaceful as a clear lake at dawn.

  “I know,” she whispers. “I’m in love with you, too.”

  We’re alone, just the two of us, and so I pull her to me and kiss her, and she wraps her arms around my waist. For a few moments that feel as eternal as a few millennia, we stand like that and watch the sun, reminiscent of Saara Lyon’s phoenix, rise to its full, fiery brightness.

  Finally we pull away.

  “Saara’s going to get her bag. Soren and Osprey are waiting here for her, and they’ll meet us back at Bunqu’s.” Remy looks me in the eye. “We’ll have time to wash off this body paint. Together.”

  After an hour of walking, we key into Bunqu’s gate and make our way around to the hidden side door. Something raises the hackles on the back of my neck. The air is too still. I set the drums down and hold up a finger, moving to peer around the corner into the back grounds of the estate.

  “What is it?” Remy whispers.

  Nothing seems amiss, but still. “Check to make sure the alarm is set.”

  She moves back to the door and uncovers the keypad. “Looks good.”

  I let out a sigh and rejoin her at the door. “Must be a bit of nerves after the vigil.”

  “I get it,” she says. “I’ve been living on knife’s edge for weeks, always expecting someone to recognize me even though I barely recognize myself.”

  She punches in the code and, once inside, resets the alarm.

  My mouth is dry, my senses still on high alert. Something’s wrong. “You go on up,” I say. “I’m going to get a drink. Want me to bring you something?”

  “Sure. One of Bunqu’s protein concoctions sounds good.” Remy stands on tiptoes to kiss me. “Don’t be long.”

  “Don’t worry,” I say, my pulse already racing, suddenly very conscious of the Bolt holstered at my side. I watch as Remy disappears up the back staircase and then I head down the long hallway to the kitchen. I stop in my tracks and instinctively draw my Bolt, ears pricked for any evidence of movement in the house, double-checking every shadow, my mind racing as I plot out everything that could possibly have gone wrong.

  “Demeter,” I whisper. “Bunqu’s place has been breached. I need intel on who and when and how.”

  “I’m blind, Vale,” Demeter says. “Bunqu’s system isn’t linked into the Sector surveillance network. It’s off the grid.” Which was a very helpful thing when all was well, I think, but is less helpful now that I suspect the place to be a trap—or a grave.

  “Can you try to hack in?”

  “I’m on it.”

  I prowl forward. In the kitchen, I stumble upon what looks like a crime scene. A frying pan appears to have shattered one cabinet door and a kitchen knife is buried in another. There’s a scorch mark on the wall and bloody handprints on the French doors leading to the veranda. Someone was wounded. I crouch to get a better look at the floor, see dim outlines of boot prints against the polished wood planks. Soldiers? I flip my Bolt’s capacitor charge to the highest setting and follow the prints through the house. Was there more than one? Is he still here? Is Remy safe upstairs? As quietly as possible, I move room to room, finally turning the corner toward Bunqu’s study where I see it: a soldier with a yawning hole in his back, still wearing the black helmet emblazoned with the gold OAC wheat stalk, lying amidst a riot of streaked and splattered blood.

  Black ops.

  Trying to avoid stepping in the gore, I move toward the open door to the study. “Bunqu?” I say, my voice just loud enough to be heard in the study. “General Bunqu, are you in there?”

  There’s no answer, no movement. But someone’s in there, I can feel it. The question is, are they friend or foe, dead or alive? Bolt up and ready to fire, I charge into the room only to pull up short. Meera, head bowed and legs outstretched on the luxurious ornamental carpet, sits propped up against Bunqu’s desk as i
f she’s taking a nap. A dark blossom stains her shirt and a blood-mottled knife—did she pull it from her own chest?—rests cockeyed between her legs. Red-stained fingers are still wrapped around the trigger of an antique shotgun which must have come from Bunqu’s collection.

  Kneeling beside her, the metallic tang of iron fills my nostrils. I can almost taste the blood on the back of my tongue. I lift her face, a mass of bruises, eyes staring agape into an empty world. Sadness billows through me, like a sail catching the wind. Then anger. Another life lost in the service of the Orleáns. Then hatred. I choke back the bile as the memory of my mother ordering Chan-Yu to assassinate Remy and Soren flashes through my mind.

  Remy. Waiting for me upstairs.

  I reach down to close Meera’s eyes—there’s no reason for Remy to see that—and then notice there’s something strange about her mouth. With a quick apology for the violation, and all the clinical detachment of a medical examiner, I reach into her mouth and slide my finger around her cheeks and under her tongue. There’s something there, crumpled into a ball. I pull it out. A tiny v-scroll.

  I unroll it and words flash across the fibers.

  Onion under arrest. Caught in crossfire. If you find this, follow the acorns to the tree.

  My hand goes to the acorn pendant around my neck. The Outsider symbol that will call a Wayfarer for help when traveling through the Wilds. If you find this, follow the acorns to the tree. Are there more pendants like this? Or is she talking about literal acorns—like the ones Bunqu handed us earlier?

  I stand and look around the room, remembering the urgency of our situation. I don’t have time for Outsider riddles right now. We need to get out of here.

  “Demeter, why isn’t the house being guarded? Why isn’t the place crawling with black ops?”

  “I wasn’t able to access Bunqu’s private network, but I can see through the city’s nav system that there are several patrol drones circling the neighborhood in a half-hour loop, operated manually. I can’t control them. You’ve got about five minutes before one of them makes it back here.”

  I’m already in motion, running down the hall to the central stairs to find Remy. I take them two at a time. I pull open the door to our room and rush in. Standing in the steamy bathroom in one of Bunqu’s oversized bathrobes, Remy’s body gleams like polished bronze against the stark white of the open robe. A shiver of longing runs through me, coupled with an even more powerful desire to stay alive so I can experience her beauty another day. She turns toward me, a smile of anticipation melting into alarm as she sees the Bolt in my hand.

  “Gods, what’s wrong?”

  “It’s Meera.” There’s no time to break the news slowly. Without a word, she reaches out and turns the shower off. “She’s dead. Bunqu’s been arrested. Patrol drones will be back to circle in five minutes. We’ve got to move.”

  “Where is she?” Remy’s already shed the robe, slipping into her clothes. I watch her, marveling at her calm, marveling that despite all she’s been through—or maybe because of all she’s been through—she can take such news in stride.

  “Bunqu’s study.”

  “No sign of him?”

  “No.”

  She nods, taking it all in. Shuddering, she sucks in a deep breath and straightens her shoulders. She hesitates only a second. Now fully dressed, she follows me outside, grabbing her bag on the way. In the backyard, Remy reaches into the air where Osprey’s cloaked oiseau is parked. Her touch deactivates the cloaking. She leaps on, toggling the engine, and I hop on behind her. We zip out of the backyard and down the road as quickly as we dare. The hoverbike’s engine is as quiet as a summer breeze, and within thirty seconds, we’re safely hidden in a copse of trees.

  “Are we out of range?” I ask Demeter.

  “You’re clear. Stay in the trees.”

  Remy pulls the walkie-talkie out from the folds of her jacket and hands it to me. “Soren,” she says. I press the transmit button and signal Soren. When his voice comes back, Remy listens as I fill him in. I can hear Osprey’s voice in the background as Soren relays to her and Saara what’s going on.

  “Should we come your way?” Soren asks.

  “No. Drones are watching the house. We need to get out.”

  “You and Remy have a plan?” Soren says. I hear him confer with Osprey.

  “No. Except to get out of here.”

  “Have them meet us at the outermost PODS dock in the northeast quadrant,” Remy says to me. “We can take the oiseau to meet them. We’ll decide what to do once we’re all together.”

  I relay the message and then, before I sign off, I say, “Soren, ask Osprey what Meera meant by ‘follow the acorns to the tree.’”

  “Roger,” Soren says. Remy raises her eyebrows as we hear him repeat the question. Osprey’s voice, barely audible, crackles through the walkie-talkie.

  “I have no idea.”

  Goddammit, Meera, why do all you Outsiders have to be so fucking cryptic?

  14 - REMY

  Spring 79, Sector Annum 106, 12h18

  Gregorian Calendar: June 6

  It’s high noon and shadows are scarce by the time we make it to The Elysium. I have no idea if Snake will even be here; the smoke den is closed and the sign on the front says it won’t open until 17h00. And from what I understand, Snake works the late shift.

  I hear Vale whispering something to his C-Link. I lean into his shoulder to catch his words.

  “Abandoned houses, untouched vacation homes, old factories, industrial junkyards—anything that will provide us a bit of shelter,” he says. I can’t hear her response, but I assume she’s searching the four quadrants of Okaria for something that will meet Vale’s criteria. “Unguarded and forgotten.” He quiets for a moment, focusing on an invisible spot across the street on The Elysium’s elegant wood-paneled exterior.

  I survey the building. There’s one entrance from the front and no windows, which contributes to the otherworldly, underwater feel of the interior. My heart sinks. I doubt anyone is here now, and I don’t even know Snake’s real name. How am I supposed to tell him about Meera?

  Meera. What did she tell me those first few days I was staying with her? If you ever need to run, there’s a safe house on the outskirts of Okaria. Big, empty, comfortable.

  “My grandfather’s house.” Vale looks at me, surprised, and I realize I’ve said the words out loud. “Meera told me weeks ago I could stay there if I ever needed a safe place.”

  How could I have known that by the end of the day, I would need two more seeds—one for Meera’s death, and one for her life?

  I grab instinctively at the burnished metal that lives in my pocket, the compass that was once my grandfather’s, and then Tai’s, and then Vale’s. Memories wash over me. Picking fresh fruit off the trees in his yard. Drawing the lotus blossoms in his fountain. Learning how to fillet fish, knead dough, slice an onion without crying too much—all contraband activities, declared illegal over forty years ago. The Okarian Agricultural Corporation and the Board of Health and Diet consolidated into the Okarian Agricultural Consortium in response to a bioterrorism threat from the North Pacific Federation. The new OAC outlawed home cooking and food preparation, declaring such activities “unsafe.” My grandfather didn’t care about those silly laws, though, and because of his integral role in developing so many medicines and human modifications, no one bothered him about it.

  “Wow,” Vale says, his voice hushed. “That’s the perfect place.”

  “Have Demeter do a scan, just to make sure.”

  A few seconds later, Vale nods.

  “She says the last aerial photograph of the house was taken over a month ago, and it was totally abandoned.”

  The thought of returning to my grandfather’s house for the first time in five years is almost too much to take. I focus in on the challenge in front of me, so as not to be overwhelmed: how do I find Snake?

  “We need to get in there.” I nod at the door in front of us.

  H
e shakes his head.

  “No,” he says. “He’s probably not there right now. Tell me everything you know about him, and I’ll have Demeter run it through Personhood. Maybe we can get an address for him.”

  “Purple hair and eyebrows. About thirty, thirty-five years old. Sharp nose, round chin, high cheekbones, very pale, like Soren. He works at the Elysium, he’s the manager, or at least he sets the—”

  “Demeter’s got him,” he says. “His name is listed as Sen Priorat in Personhood. Currently resides in Sector housing—South quadrant, Rue du Vent, Building 39, number 17.”

  I brighten. “That’s not far at all. Let’s go.”

  I turn and set off. Vale keeps pace with me, and I wind my fingers into his. He leans into me as a triad of professionals in golden OAC lab coats walk by. It’s safer to look like a couple. People are less likely to notice you if you look happy.

  As we walk, I hear a rescue drone zoom by, followed, as always, by a medevac truck. The green and red lights flare as the truck blazes through the streets. I follow it with my eyes, but it’s long past us in a matter of seconds. Not five minutes later, though, there’s another one—a drone followed by a medevac team. It turns down the same road we are, zipping past us, and then down a side street. When Vale and I make it there, I can see the truck stalled, its bay doors open, and two nurses carry a stretcher up a set of stairs.

  “Meera said there’s some kind of bug going around where she worked,” I mutter to Vale. “Is that why there are all these ambulances?”

  Vale stops and stares for a moment, watching the medevac team suit up in sterilized gear. But he shakes his head, turning away.

  “It’s just a coincidence. Seems doubtful something could spread so quickly.”

  We walk on.

  A few minutes later, we’re at Snake’s building. The Sector provides residential buildings for unmarried men and women who are either recent transplants to the city or who do not have well-paying jobs. Sponsored housing is very low security. The palming mechanism is heat-sensitive only, so neither of us will risk identifying ourselves. There’s no doorman—only a small security drone, not even equipped with a Bolt.

 

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