Among the Free

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Among the Free Page 14

by Margaret Peterson Haddix


  “No,” Luke said. “He escaped with Oscar.”

  “Then he could come back,” Trey said. “He could get the Population Police back together, consolidate his power again—”

  “We’re making sure that doesn’t happen,” Luke said. He pointed at a bunch of people gathered around a table someone had pulled out onto the grass. “That group is talking about writing a new constitution to guarantee everyone’s rights.” He pointed to another table at the other end of the yard. “They’re talking about how to distribute food fairly until the next harvest.” He watched a man and two women setting up another table nearby. “I’m not sure what they’re going to talk about at that table, but this is our new government. The people.”

  His friends stared at him in amazement.

  “Good grief,” Mr. Talbot said. “We’ve gone from ideologues to idealists.”

  “Don’t you think it will work?” Luke asked.

  Mr. Talbot peered around at the crowd. Luke could see how he might be doubtful: Most of the people at the tables were pretty young; they were dressed in ragged clothes and had shaggy hair. They didn’t look like a government.

  But Mr. Talbot grinned.

  “This is the best chance we have,” he said. “Maybe I’ll go check out that constitution they’re working on . . . ”

  He wandered off, and Nina and Trey settled in with Luke, pulling down the signs. The adhesive Oscar’s supporters had used was very strong; it was difficult erasing every trace of every hateful word. But Luke and his friends were persistent, working side by side.

  “So I’m the only one who didn’t go to Mr. Hendricks’s house?” Luke asked.

  “All our friends are there—and lots of other third children who didn’t have anywhere else to go. Your brother’s there too,” Nina said. “His leg’s still in bad shape, but Mr. Talbot said he was in charge of protecting the younger children if anything happened.”

  If anything happened . . . Luke shivered, thinking about how easily Oscar’s plans could have succeeded. How easily, even now, the new freedom could be stifled if people didn’t guard it carefully, didn’t use it wisely.

  “Mark’s disappointed that he never got to come back here and work undercover,” Nina said. “He says he missed all the fun.”

  “Fun?” Luke snorted. “Right. I would have traded places with him in a heartbeat. He could have ridden Jenny for me. He could have stood up on that stage.”

  “No,” Nina said, “he couldn’t have. It had to be one of us.”

  A third child, she meant. In the end, only a third child could have stopped Oscar.

  “Weren’t you scared?” Trey asked, scrubbing at the shadowy backing left by the sign. “Admitting you were a third child in front of that huge crowd—in front of the whole country, really—”

  “Of course I was scared,” Luke said. “But I had to do it, you know?”

  He looked at his two friends, and he knew they understood. They had also taken some terrifying chances. They had also risked their lives for freedom. It made the job of tearing down signs seem simple by comparison. Luke wondered if this was how it would be for the rest of their lives: that any other dangers or challenges they might face would pale in comparison to what they’d survived as kids.

  We’ll have a “rest of our lives” now, Luke thought, surprising himself. We will. He’d never dared to think that far ahead before. But now he gazed back out over the vast crowd again, and he could almost see everything he wanted to happen, stretching out far into the future.

  He could see his family rushing through the crowd to find him—having seen him on TV, they wouldn’t be able to sit at home, waiting, anymore. And instead of whisking him off home to try to keep him safe, they would decide to stay and help. He could see his dad telling the new government how to deal with farmers, his mother telling them about factory workers.

  He could see Matthew getting to raise hogs again. He could see himself playing football with Mark again—Mark’s leg finally fully healed—and maybe with Jen’s older brothers, Brownley and Buellton, as well, when they came back safely to the Talbots’ house.

  He could see old, abandoned fields reclaimed, resplendent with new crops. He could see roads and bridges and houses all over the country repaired and rebuilt, all the warped framework set right, all the broken windows replaced.

  He could see Oscar Wydell and Aldous Krakenaur and all the other Population Police officials caught and tried and sentenced, so none of them could haunt his nightmares ever again.

  He could see Mr. Hendricks and Mr. and Mrs. Talbot working in the new government. Maybe one of them would be the new leader—a leader chosen by the people, not just forced into office through brute strength. Maybe someday he or Nina or Trey might even campaign to be elected, and then lead the country that had once said they had no right to exist.

  He could see Nina taking care of her grandmother and aunties the way they’d once taken care of her. He could see Trey becoming a college professor someday, and Matthias becoming a minister, and Percy an engineer, and Alia, little Alia—well, maybe someday she’d be a doctor like Mrs. Talbot.

  He could see all the timid, odd third children he’d known at Hendricks School getting a chance to lead ordinary lives—or maybe extraordinary lives. Maybe one of them would become a great inventor or a great writer or a great philosopher or . . . who could say what they might be capable of now?

  He could see Smits reclaiming Population Police headquarters as the Grant house again, turning it into a home for children who’d lost their families. And he could see the boy on crutches, the one who’d been beaten by the Population Police, helping out.

  He could see himself as a grown man with a farm of his own, married with children of his own—maybe two, maybe three, maybe more. He would take his wife and children and go back for Sunday dinners with Mother and Dad and Matthew’s family and Mark’s family. And they’d all sit at the same table, all together.

  He could see himself and his friends gathering each year at a memorial for Jen and all the other third children who’d died in the rally. He could see himself staying longer than everyone else, bending down over the memorial so he could touch the cold stone and whisper to the ghostly memory of a girl who would never grow up, who had sacrificed everything for her beliefs: Jen, we did it. Everyone’s free now.

  He didn’t know if any of those things would really happen.

  But they were all possible now.

  Here’s a look at Margaret Peterson Haddix’s book Found, which launches her new series, The Missing.

  Available now from

  Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers

  PROLOGUE

  It wasn’t there. Then it was.

  Later, that was how Angela DuPre would describe the airplane—over and over, to one investigator after another—until she was told never to speak of it again.

  But when she first saw the plane that night, she wasn’t thinking about mysteries or secrets. She was wondering how many mistakes she could make without getting fired, how many questions she dared ask before her supervisor, Monique, would explode, “That’s it! You’re too stupid to work at Sky Trails Air! Get out of here!” Angela had used a Post-it note to write down the code for standby passengers who’d received a seat assignment at the last minute, and she’d stuck it to her computer screen. She knew she had. But somehow, between the flight arriving from Saint Louis and the one leaving for Chicago, the Post-it had vanished. Any minute now, she thought, some standby passenger would show up at the counter asking for a boarding pass, and Angela would be forced to turn to Monique once more and mumble, “Uh, what was that code again?” And then Monique, who had perfect hair and perfect nails and a perfect tan and had probably been born knowing all the Sky Trails codes, would grit her teeth and narrow her eyes and repeat the code in that slow fake-patient voice she’d been using with Angela all night, the voice that said behind the words, I know you’re severely mentally challenged, so I will try not to speak faster tha
n one word per minute, but you have to realize, this is a real strain for me because I am so vastly superior. . . .

  Angela was not severely mentally challenged. She’d done fine in school and at the Sky Trails orientation. It was just, this was her first actual day on the job, and Monique had been nasty from the very start. Every one of Monique’s frowns and glares and insinuations kept making Angela feel more panicky and stupid.

  Sighing, Angela glanced up. She needed a break from staring at the computer screen longing for a lost Post-it. She peered out at the passengers crowding the terminal: tired-looking families sprawled in seats, dark-suited businessmen sprinting down the aisle. Which one of them would be the standby flier who’d rush up to the counter and ruin Angela’s life? Generally speaking, Angela had always liked people; she wasn’t used to seeing them as threats. She forced her gaze beyond the clumps of passengers, to the huge plate glass window on the other side of the aisle. It was getting dark out, and Angela could see the runway lights twinkling in the distance.

  Runway, runaway, she thought vaguely. And then—had she blinked?—suddenly the lights were gone. No, she corrected herself, blocked. Suddenly there was an airplane between Angela and the runway lights, an airplane rolling rapidly toward the terminal.

  Angela gasped.

  “What now?” Monique snarled, her voice thick with exasperation.

  “That plane,” Angela said. “At gate 2B. I thought it—” What was she supposed to say? Wasn’t there? Appeared out of thin air?”—I thought it was going too fast and might run into the building,” she finished in a rush, because suddenly that had seemed true too. She watched as the plane pulled to a stop, neatly aligned with the jetway. “But it . . . didn’t. No worries.”

  Monique whirled on Angela.

  “Never,” she began, in a hushed voice full of suppressed rage, “never, ever, ever say anything like that. Weren’t you paying attention in orientation? Never say you think a plane is going to crash. Never say a plane could crash. Never even use the word crash. Do you understand?”

  “Okay,” Angela whispered. “Sorry.”

  But some small rebellious part of her brain was thinking, I didn’t use the word crash. Weren’t you paying attention to me? And if a plane really was going to run into the building, wouldn’t Sky Trails want its employees to warn people, to get them out of the way?

  Just as rebelliously, Angela kept watching the plane parked at 2B, instead of bending her head back down to concentrate on her computer.

  “Um, Monique?” she said after a few moments. “Should one of us go over there and help the passengers unload—er, I mean—deplane?” She was proud of herself for remembering to use the official airline-sanctioned word for unloading.

  Beside her, Monique rolled her eyes.

  “The gate agents responsible for 2B,” she said in a tight voice, “will handle deplaning there.”

  Angela glanced at the 2B counter, which was silent and dark and completely unattended. There wasn’t even a message scrolling across the LCD sign behind the counter to indicate that the plane had arrived or where it’d come from.

  “Nobody’s there,” Angela said stubbornly.

  Frowning, Monique finally glanced up.

  “Great. Just great,” she muttered. “I always have to fix everyone else’s mistakes.” She began stabbing her perfectly manicured nails at her computer keyboard. Then she stopped, mid-stab. “Wait—that can’t be right.”

  “What is it?” Angela asked.

  Monique was shaking her head.

  “Must be pilot error,” she said, grimacing in disgust. “Some yahoo pulled up to the wrong gate. There’s not supposed to be anyone at that gate until the Cleveland flight at nine thirty.”

  Angela considered telling Monique that if Sky Trails had banned crash from their employees’ vocabulary, that maybe passengers should be protected from hearing pilot error as well. But Monique was already grabbing the telephone, barking out orders.

  “Yeah, Bob, major screwup,” she was saying. “You’ve got to get someone over here. . . . No, I don’t know which gate it was supposed to go to. How would I know? Do you think I’m clairvoyant? . . . No, I can’t see the numbers on the plane. Don’t you know it’s dark out?”

  With her free hand, Monique was gesturing frantically at Angela.

  “At least go open the door!” she hissed.

  “You mean . . . ”

  “The door to the jetway!” Monique said, pointing. Angela hoped that some of the contempt on Monique’s face was intended for Bob, not just her. Angela imagined meeting Bob someday, sharing a laugh at Monique’s expense. Still, dutifully, she walked over to the 2B waiting area and pulled open the door to the hallway that led down to the plane.

  Nobody came out.

  Angela picked a piece of lint off her blue skirt and then stood at attention, her back perfectly straight, just like in the training videos. Maybe she couldn’t keep track of standby codes, but she was capable of standing up straight.

  Still, nobody appeared.

  Angela began to feel foolish, standing so alertly by an open door that no one was using. She bent her head and peeked down the jetway—it was deserted and turned at such an angle that she couldn’t see all the way down to the plane, to see if anyone had opened the door to the jet yet. She backed up a little and peered out the window, straight down to the cockpit of the plane. The cockpit was dark, its windows blank, and that struck Angela as odd. She’d been on the job for only five hours, and she’d been a little distracted. But she was pretty sure that when planes landed, the pilots stayed in the cockpit for a while filling out paperwork or something. She thought that they at least waited until all the passengers were off before they turned out the cockpit lights.

  Angela peeked down the empty jetway once more and went back to Monique.

  “Of course I’m sure there’s a plane at that gate! I can see it with my own eyes!” Monique was practically screaming into the phone. She shook her head at Angela, and for the first time it was almost in a companionable way, as if to say, At least you know there’s a plane there! Unlike the other morons I have to deal with! Monique cupped her hand over the receiver and fumed to Angela, “The incompetence around here is unbelievable! The control tower says that plane never landed, never showed up on the radar. The Sky Trails dispatcher says we’re not missing a plane—everything that was supposed to land in the past hour pulled up to the right gate, and all the other planes due to arrive within the next hour or so are accounted for. How could so many people just lose a plane?”

  Or, how could we find it? Angela thought. The whole situation was beginning to seem strange to her, otherworldly. But maybe that was just a function of being new to the job, of having spent so much time concentrating on the computer and being yelled at by Monique. Maybe airports lost and found planes all the time, and that was just one of those things nobody had mentioned in the Sky Trails orientation.

  “Did, uh, anybody try to contact the pilot?” Angela asked cautiously.

  “Of course!” Monique said. “But there’s no answer. He must be on the wrong frequency.”

  Angela thought of the dark cockpit, the way she hadn’t been able to see through the windows. She decided not to mention this.

  “Should I go back and wait? . . . ”

  Monique nodded fiercely and went back to yelling into the phone: “What do you mean, this isn’t your responsibility? It’s not my responsibility either!”

  Angela was glad to put a wide aisle and two waiting areas between herself and Monique again. She went back to the jetway door by gate 2B. The sloped hallway leading down to the plane was still empty, and the colorful travel posters lining the walls—“Sky Trails! Your ticket to the world!”—seemed jarringly bright. Angela stepped into the jetway.

  I’ll just go down far enough to see if the jet door is open, she told herself. It may be a violation of protocol, but Monique won’t notice, not when she’s busy yelling at everyone else in the airport. . . .

/>   At the bend in the ramp, Angela looked around the corner. She had a limited view, but caught a quick glimpse of a flight attendants’ little galley, with neatly stowed drink carts. Obviously, the jet door was standing wide open. She started to turn around, already beginning to debate with herself about whether she should report this information to Monique. Then she heard—what? A whimper? A cry?

  Angela couldn’t exactly identify the sound, but it was enough to pull her on down the jetway.

  New Sky Trails employee saves passenger on first day on job, she thought to herself, imagining the praise and congratulations—and maybe the raise—she’d be sure to receive if what she was visualizing was real. She’d learned CPR in the orientation session. She knew basic first aid. She knew where every emergency phone in the airport was located. She started walking faster, then running.

  On the side of the jet, she was surprised to see a strange insignia: TACHYON TRAVEL, it said, some airline Angela had never heard of. Was that a private charter company maybe? And then, while she was staring at it, the words suddenly changed into the familiar wing-in-the-clouds symbol of Sky Trails.

  Angela blinked.

  That couldn’t have happened, she told herself. It was just an optical illusion, just because I was running, just because I’m worried about whoever made that cry or whimper. . . .

  Angela stepped onto the plane. She turned her head first to the left, looking into the cockpit. Its door also stood open, but the small space was empty, the instruments dark.

  “Hello?” Angela called, looking to the right now, expecting to see some flight attendant with perfectly applied makeup—or maybe some flight attendant and a pilot bent over a prone passenger, maybe an old man suddenly struck down by a heart attack or a stroke. Or, at the very least, passengers crowding the aisle, clutching laptops and stuffed animals brought from faraway grandparents’ homes, overtired toddlers crying, fragile old women calling out to taller men, “Could you pull my luggage down from the overhead for me? It’s that red suitcase over there. . . . ”

 

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