One Spark of Hope

Home > Other > One Spark of Hope > Page 5
One Spark of Hope Page 5

by Campbell, Jamie


  My fingers were sore and scratched, growing worse with each rock I pried from the earth and dropped onto the black tar. I didn’t want to lose another opportunity, I had to get it right this time. My dress rehearsal had failed, the main event could not.

  There looked like there were more rocks on the road than in the ground by the time I was finished. To make it seem more like a natural event, I laid dead leaves and twigs from the forest floor across the asphalt.

  It still didn’t look very convincing.

  I wasn’t a miracle worker.

  Light was starting to fade, reminding me how many shadows lived amongst the trees. I was terrified of going to sleep, sitting upright with my back pressed across the gnarled bark of a tree so I couldn’t get comfortable.

  I wondered whether the others had found a town yet or whether they were still walking through the forest. A part of me feared the trees went on forever and nothing else existed outside of Aria. That’s what President Stone wanted us to believe, maybe she wasn’t lying.

  The thought almost made me laugh.

  Of course the president was lying.

  There was nothing more I was surer of.

  The trucks had to come from somewhere, which meant the trees would eventually end and they would find a town. It would only be a matter of time. I hoped it was sooner rather than later and they would be welcomed instead of shunned.

  If the rocks didn’t stop the next vehicle, then nothing would. There was a lot of walking in my future if that was the case. My feet screamed at me to reconsider already, to find another plan or simply live in that patch of forest for the rest of my life.

  I watched the rays of sun grow smaller until they completely faded away and gave up to the night. Everything looked different at nighttime in amongst the trees. The noises were different too. Birds that had been sleeping all day suddenly came alive, hooting out their voices and telling everyone that they were awake and alive.

  Crickets chirped so loudly they may as well have been living in my ears. They refused to be silenced, not caring what anyone else said. Every rustle of leaves was the creature stalking me, determined to make me their next meal and waiting for the right time.

  I felt very small in such a big place.

  My existence was inconsequential to everything else in the forest. The trees and animals would continue to live even without my presence there. It all thrived regardless of what happened with me or in Aria.

  There was something both terrifying and empowering about that thought. It emboldened me to fight for my right to exist and make a mark on the world. It scared me to think I could vanish and it wouldn’t care.

  They were my final thoughts before I drifted off to sleep.

  A noise battered against my head in my dreams. It was a constant hum, as sharp as an icepick as it tore at my consciousness. I swatted at it, wishing it would go away.

  Until I realized it was real.

  And the source was an approaching vehicle.

  The sun was already peering over the top of the trees when my eyes flew open. Lacework of rays were dancing around the ground, making patterns as complex as only nature could make.

  I shot to my feet, making my head spin with the action before bracing myself against the tree. Now was not a time for fuzzy thoughts, they needed to be sharp and still so I could think and act as I needed to.

  Peeking my head through the trees, I saw the vehicle. This one was a truck again, but bigger than the last two. Its gray metal walls rattled as it moved, having a competition with the engine to see who could be louder.

  I counted down again, waiting to add the sound of crunching metal to the mix. But before I could, the truck’s brakes squealed as they were forced to clamp down on the wheels. The driver swerved, trying desperately to avoid the rocks and stop before he hit them.

  He was too late.

  Through the window, I caught a glimpse of his expression. The middle-aged man was angry and confused. He gripped the steering wheel like it was a lifesaver but it wasn’t going to save him from my trap.

  The vehicle hit the rocks, the noise they made when they collided was much louder than I expected as it hit the metal underside of the truck. The tires gripped the road as they skidded from side to side, gliding as if on snow.

  Pieces of branches and leaves were kicked up into the air, making a green and brown whirlwind around the action. The whole scene took only a few seconds to play out in front of me, but it felt much, much longer.

  The truck came to a screeching stop in the middle of the road. I could hear the driver swearing from my spot in the forest. I crept closer, crouching low and remaining in the shadows. I might not have had very long before he got the truck working again and taking off.

  He jumped down from the high cab and did a complete circle around the truck, inspecting it low to take in the damage. I could see a few dents but it looked otherwise fine. I doubted I had done any real damage, maybe shaken up the man a bit, at worse.

  He looked just like any citizen in Aria. I’d never seen anybody from the outside before yesterday. We weren’t allowed to discuss anything that happened outside the wall so a part of me wondered if it really was just full of monsters.

  But this man could have been walking in the middle of Aria Square and he wouldn’t look any different. Nobody would look at him twice.

  He stood and looked around, his gaze travelling over my hiding spot. My heart stopped beating while his eyes lingered on the area. I was convinced he could see me, sure he would come over and demand to know my crimes.

  Would he kill me?

  Or would he deliver me to Stone once he saw the paleness of my blue eyes?

  Every atom in my body froze while he watched. Any moment now he would yell out, maybe rush at me quickly before I had a chance to get up and stumble over my gimp foot. My defect would make it easy for him to catch me.

  Any moment now.

  I couldn’t move.

  He looked away and I almost died of relief.

  His inspection of the vehicle ended at the front tire on the right hand side. He swore again, letting off a string of curse words before they settled down into a sigh. Standing, he kicked the tire several times in frustration before resigning himself to the conclusion. It was flattening, it needed to be changed.

  I hoped he had a spare.

  Otherwise the wait would be a lot longer than I had planned for.

  He moved to the other side of the truck and opened the door, fiddling with something before the whole cab leaned forward. I assumed that was where the spare was kept, but I was the last person qualified to know for sure.

  While he was busy with his head buried in the cab and his mind focused on the task, I took my chance. One hesitant step out was quickly followed by a series of fast ones. My feet were as quiet as a ghost as I skipped around the debris and headed for the back door of the truck.

  It had a large handle on the back, sure to make a noise when I tried to move it. I crawled onto the bumper bar and waited for an opportunity, not daring to breathe while I did.

  After a few minutes the driver lowered the cab. I had a window of only a few seconds to coordinate my door with the noise of the cab closing. I waited only two beats of my heart before taking the opportunity.

  The handle groaned when I turned the metal bar but it didn’t resist me. I slipped inside the back of the truck and closed the door behind me. I couldn’t lock it from the inside so I let it swing open naturally, hoping the driver would think it came loose in the melee caused by the rocks.

  The truck was filled with boxes, pictures on the sides said food was contained within. It smelled earthy, like they could have been filled with fresh produce. Just the thought of food made my stomach grumble and beg to be sated.

  I squeezed through the boxes to reach the back of the space, pushing a few stacks over a few inches so I could fit. I crouched down and strained to hear the progress of the driver.

  It was eerily quiet in my hidey-hole. All I could he
ar was the sound of my blood rushing through my ears. I wasn’t entirely sure whether I was more scared of being caught, or returning to Aria. Hiding in the truck would guarantee me either entry into the city or a swift death when caught by the guards at the gate.

  The moment the truck started, my fate would be in the hands of a higher power. I could only hope luck was with me. It hadn’t done me any favors in the past. But there was a first time for everything.

  I was convinced I was going to be found. Surely the driver would thoroughly check his load before driving off? If he couldn’t fix the tire, maybe he would call for another truck. It would arrive and they would have to take everything out of this one to go into the undamaged vehicle. They would definitely find me there, hiding behind the boxes like a piece of treasured cargo.

  It was difficult to breathe. My lungs seized up, deciding it was easier to give up now than suffer a death from someone else’s hands. I gasped, gulping in air that tasted like cardboard. The harder I breathed the louder I was.

  I was going to get caught.

  I would never see Reece or Rocky again.

  The air was forced into my lungs, large shocking gasps that dried my throat and threatened to choke me. I focused on the rhythm of my breaths, counting them to ten before starting again. It was all that existed in my world for a few minutes.

  To calm myself down I told myself lies. I could do this, I could return to Aria and survive, I wouldn’t be found in the truck, it would be easy to get out again once through the walls, the guards wouldn’t check inside the vehicle. I told myself every lie imaginable until I could breathe normally again.

  The back door locked.

  Something outside slammed.

  The truck leaned a little to the side.

  The engine roared to life.

  We were moving. The driver must have been able to fix the tire so we could continue on toward Aria. Maybe my lies weren’t so untruthful after all.

  It was dark in the truck but I remembered the boxes contained food. There would be a while before we reached the gates so I had a chance to eat something. Prying open one of the boxes, the food inside was cold but a distinct shape – carrots. They tasted only slightly of dirt so I ate one and then another. A few more were stuffed into my pockets for later.

  If there was a later.

  I settled back into my hiding place and tried not to let the gentle rocking of the cabin lull me to sleep. I needed to be fully alert and awake, nodding off now could be disastrous for my survival.

  In my mind I pictured the road outside. It had taken me a full day to walk to where I set my trap. How long would it take to drive it? A fraction of the time, no doubt.

  Instead of picturing the guards we would encounter at the gate, I imagined Reece and what he would be doing now. It was probably something normal like eating or having a meeting with Joseph, but it was reassuring. If he was doing something ordinary, then maybe after I found him we could do something ordinary together. I was just so tired of having to run and escape and hide. I craved normal.

  The truck stopped before I could really prepare myself. Not that I could do anything, but I needed to be as silent as a mouse and as invisible as the wind.

  The truck bobbed as it righted itself, the driver must have left his seat. I pictured him speaking with the guards as voices mingled together in a muffled din outside. I couldn’t hear what they were saying.

  Until the back door opened.

  The sliver of light was like a warning beacon as it lit up the back of the truck. I shrunk further into my hiding place, crossing everything I had to give me good luck.

  “It’s just food, the usual delivery,” a man said. I recognized his voice, it was the driver. He wasn’t using any of the curse words he was muttering when I first met him. “You never normally check the load.”

  “New security measures, sir,” another man replied, undoubtedly a guard. They worked in pairs, another one would be close by.

  “I don’t have anything to hide.”

  “I’m sure you don’t, but we still have to look. President’s orders and all being what they are.”

  “So you’re checking all deliveries now? My boss is going to love that, it will take us twice as long for each haul.”

  “Sorry, sir. We’ll be as quick as we can and then you can be on your way.”

  The truck groaned as someone stepped onto the bed. The spotlight of a flashlight flicked around the darkness. I closed my eyes, hoping that would help.

  It didn’t.

  His heavy booted footsteps thudded on the steel floor. Boxes rustled as he randomly chose some to look inside and inspect the contents. The smell of dirt and sweat permeated the air.

  I all but stopped breathing.

  He was getting too close.

  He was going to find me.

  Chapter 6: Reece

  Troopers swarmed in from every direction, all descending on the café like a heard of crows picking over a dead body. Every instinct told me to run but I couldn’t leave Frankie and Anne in there alone. They were one of us, one of the Resistance, we couldn’t spare even a single person.

  I sprinted across the road and stood on the sidewalk, waving my arms around. “Hey! It’s me you’re looking for.”

  And then I ran.

  “It’s Thompson!”

  “Get him!”

  “Don’t let him get away!”

  All the voices faded into the sound of my pounding footsteps on the pavement. I used every piece of my training to run as fast as I could away from the café, leading as many troopers as I could from Frankie and Anne.

  If I could just give them a shot at escape, I knew they would take it. Being captured by the Resistance was going to be a guaranteed death, and when faced with those odds, people tended to do whatever they could to make sure that didn’t happen.

  The troopers behind me were fast, of course. We’d all had the same elite training and been forced to go through our fitness tests all the same. We were all matched which terrified the hell out of me.

  I skipped around a corner at the last minute, jarring my ankle in the process. Hopefully it would be worth it. The pain radiated out but I pushed it down to deal with later. Right now all that mattered was getting away from the troopers.

  “Stop or I’ll shoot!” one called from behind. His voice mingled in with others all making similar threats. Their guns may have been impressive but I knew they would have to stop the pursuit in order to use them. They were too bulky to shoot otherwise.

  But it would only be a matter of time before they decided running took too much energy and shooting was far less work.

  Until then I tried to put as much distance between us as possible. I forced my feet to continue, pounding on the cement sidewalk and screaming across streets until we had rounded so many corners it was difficult working out where we were.

  “We know it’s you, Thompson. We’re going to put you down like the traitor you are.”

  The entrance to an alleyway came into view in the distance. I pushed forward, throwing every last piece of energy I had into the last block separating us. I ducked around the alley at the last minute, hoping I was so far ahead of the troopers that they didn’t see me.

  I slipped down the alleyway and around a few more corners before I was certain they were no longer nipping at my heels. Their shouted commands were still lingering in the air but now they were telling me to ‘come out’ and to ‘show yourself’ so I knew they couldn’t find me.

  Leaning against the brick wall, my hands rested on my knees and took my weight while I gasped in urgently needed breaths. I heaved in the air, exhaling it forcefully.

  That had been close.

  Too close.

  It was only a tiny spark of hope that had remained alive throughout the pursuit. And even then it threatened to burn out every time I heard one of the troopers so close behind me they could probably tackle me if they timed it well enough.

  They knew it was me they had been pursuing and
not some nameless criminal. They would report back to their superiors and it would only make them angrier. If I wasn’t one of the most wanted people in Aria before, I certainly was going to be now.

  I weaved long and windy paths back toward central base of the Resistance. I was keen to know the fate of the others and make sure they had made it back too but I needed to be certain nobody followed me first.

  There were so many corners I ducked around and double backed on that I was sure nobody could have followed me. Every time I looked back there were different faces around me, none the same as earlier.

  Stepping into the base was a relief, my whole body sagging with the knowledge I had completed the mission and was relatively safe. I held up the plastic bag with the strand of hair in it that I had retrieved.

  Joseph grinned. “You got it,” he said.

  “Sure did. And the others?” My breaths were still coming in ragged bursts.

  “All returned safe with their collections. I heard what you did and thank you for your efforts.” Joseph nodded his head as a sign of thanks and respect. At least all the running was worth it. My homecoming could have been a lot worse if one of the team was missing.

  I handed over the plastic bag for the tech guys to analyze. Hopefully there would be enough DNA in it for them to do a proper job. When clones were made there was an imprint in the DNA. It was minute and hard to find, but it would be there if Adrianna and the others were clones.

  Joseph patted my arm as he moved past me. “Good work out there, Thompson. Get some rest, there’s another mission tomorrow. May luck be with you.”

  He left me with no further details.

  Just a sense of foreboding.

  I found Rocky in the rec area of the base. A few chairs were littered around a holographic television. The news was on, the reader standing in front of us in an orange glow as if standing there in person.

  From head to foot, the woman was professional and succinct. “An alleged attack by terrorists on members of parliament today caused a stir in the business district.”

 

‹ Prev