Authors: Sarah Fine
Aching, barely able to breathe, I turn onto my side and pull the door to the driver’s compartment open.
It’s filling with water. We landed in the lake. And my mom is down there, strapped in. Drowning. I gulp a huge lungful of air and plunge into the cool, murky pool. It’s all black, but I feel the softness of my mother’s hair and grope for the latch to her harness. With clumsy fingers, I fiddle with it, fighting panic, reminding myself that the only way I’ll get her out of this is by staying calm. I slide my hand down and find the latch, and then the harness loosens and she bobs up toward me. I yank at her, pulling her limp body against my chest. I grab the door frame and heave us up, shoving her face above the water’s surface, which is now at least a foot above the driver’s compartment door and rising. This whole vehicle will be filled soon. I lunge upward, nearly sucking in a mouthful of liquid as it pours down on my head. Christina’s awake and out of her harness—with the scanner in her hand. Her feet are wedged against her controls. She’s shoved the rear hatch open, and water’s rushing in. “The back of the Archer’s only an inch or so below the surface of the lake,” she shrieks through the crash and roar of the water. “We can get out.”
I wrap my arm around my mom’s waist. Christina grabs a fistful of my mom’s shirt and pulls. Mom’s bleeding from a gash in her cheek. Her nose is gushing. I jab the side of my fist into her solar plexus a few times, and she starts to cough, horrible, wracking spasms. “It’s okay, Mom,” I say. “I’m here.”
I hold her tight and kick as hard as I can, half climbing, half floating up to the rear hatch, which is our roof now, our salvation. Christina’s already halfway out, sitting on the rear of the vehicle and tugging my mom up. Her knees are next to my face as I get my mom to the surface of the lake. I look up at Christina, her expression tight with determination, right as an eerie light slides over it. She raises her head, and so do I.
The last remaining Sicarii ship hovers above us.
Its circular weapon hatch begins to open. And we’re here, a stationary target. Christina looks down at me and gives me a sad smile. “I love you, Tate.”
I gaze up at the instrument of our destruction. With everything inside me, I refuse to surrender now. Not yet. I lunge upward, yanking the scanner from her hand and throwing it at the ship, as hard as I can, a Hail Mary if ever there was one. It spirals end over end, its light flashing blue and red at us, back to yellow—and then to orange as its beam hits the enemy ship.
The scout ship gives off the telltale hum that tells us we’re about to be obliterated.
“Get back in the Archer!” I shout, and shove my mom down under the water, yanking on Christina’s legs and forcing her to do the same. I lunge for the rear door and swing it down over us with all my might as the bolt of white lightning from above strikes the Sicarii ship. I almost have the hatch closed as the wreckage rains down.
Something slams into me, and the door cracks on my head.
It’s all darkness and quiet after that.
TWENTY-ONE
MY DREAMS ARE MADE OF ICE. CHRISTINA LOOKS DOWN
at me, her beautiful face lit by the eerie light of the scout ship, frozen in that sad smile.
I love you, Tate,
she says, over and over, and even though I’m cold and blind and paralyzed, I hear her. I feel it. I cling to those words.
“I love you, Tate,” she whispers. “Wake up. Come back again.”
The pressure of warm fingers on my skin. The tickle of breath on my neck. The soft brush of lips against my temple.
“Today’s the day you come back for good.” Her voice is in my ear. A shiver streaks along my spine, and goose bumps erupt.
Christina.
“I’m here. I’m right here. All you have to do is open your eyes.”
So I try. And it hurts. The tiniest trickle of light beneath my closed eyelids feels like a splinter in my eyeball. “Can’t.”
“I’m naked.”
My eyes pop open. I manage to see her smile—and the fact that she’s clothed—before clamping them shut again. “Dirty trick,” I mumble, my voice slurring.
Her fingers slide through my hair. “You had such a bad concussion.”
“Tell me . . .” The last thing I remember was seeing the white bolt in the sky.
“You saved us from getting hit by burning wreckage when the Sicarii ship came down, but I barely got you and your mom out. Race and Congers made it to the water and helped me get you guys to shore.”
“Congers survived?”
“He did.” She takes my hand. “Rufus didn’t, though.”
“And my mom?”
“She’s in the next room over. She had a lot of internal injuries from the crash. Dr. Ackerman removed her spleen and was able to stop the bleeding. She’s recovering.”
“Manuel?”
“Broken arm, but he’s fine.”
“Sung? Graham?”
“They didn’t make it,” she says in a choked whisper. “It was quick, though.”
I wait for the ache in my chest to subside, then force my eyes open a crack. I’m in the infirmary. There’s an IV line hanging by my bed. “What day is it?”
“It’s been two days since the battle. You’ve been in and out, but Dr. Ackerman said you wouldn’t remember much of that.”
I focus on closing my own fingers, on the feel of her skin against mine. “Are you okay?”
“A lot of bruises and aches, but I’m totally okay.”
I swallow. My mouth is so dry. “And are
we
okay?”
She leans forward, lips curving into a mischievous smile. “You’ve asked me that every time you wake up. And I’ll repeat what I’ve said every time: I’m all right, and you’re all right, and we’re all right. I was really upset that you didn’t want to be with me, but your mom . . . she said it was because I was important to you, not because you didn’t think I was good enough. That helped.”
“You’re a badass,” I say, smiling despite cracked lips. “But you’re also one of the most important people in the world to me.” My dad told Leo that each family had to decide what was most important. And as the patriarch of the Archers—I have. No idea what that means yet, but I’ll take it one day at a time until I find out. “I love you.” There. I’ve finally said it when she’s awake.
She grins. “You’ve said that every time you regained consciousness, too. I think this was lucky number seven.”
Figures. “Then you know I mean it.”
Her lips touch mine. “Yep.”
A shadow appears in the doorway and clears its throat. Christina raises her head. “I’m hoping he’s back for good,” she says to it.
“Mind if I sit with him for a few?” It’s Race.
“No.” She turns back to me. “I’m going to go down to the cafeteria. I’ll be back later.”
I nod and watch her go. Race takes her place in the chair next to my bed. His arm is in a sling, and he’s limping slightly. His face is bruised, and he looks exhausted, but not unhappy. I try to sit up, but it’s a struggle. He hits a control and motors me up, so at least I’m not flat on my back. The movement makes me feel like I might barf, though.
“I checked the population counter,” he tells me. “There are no more anomalies. We got all of them.”
“Any sign of others on their way?”
“Not yet. But now that the network’s active, we’ve notified our government contacts all over the world. There will be cooperation to bolster it quickly, so when the Sicarii do show up, we’ll know long before they get close and be able to hold them out there until they . . . run out of telomerase and die of old age, I suppose. That Sicarii prisoner said they were now running through victims every few weeks. They can’t stay in space forever. With your dad’s plans and the remains of the wrecked H2 defense ship, we can strengthen the network and create a deadly, robust shield.”
“What now?”
Race sits back. “Bill Congers and Angus McClaren are negotiating. But I believe things will be different from now on. We have a new understanding.”
“No more secrets?”
He chuckles. “Oh, the secret will remain, for now at least. What good will it honestly do to reveal that two-thirds of the population are descendants of an alien species? No, I mean that The Fifty and the Core will be allies now. There will be no more aggression between us.”
“What do the Bishops have to say about that? Their patriarch is dead.”
“But in the end, he knew who his enemy was, and he was willing to give his life to save this planet. The Bishops have been notified of recent events, with the understanding that they will stay quiet if they want the money to keep flowing. They can live however they’d like, as far off the grid as they want to be—as long as they don’t hurt others or try to reveal the existence of the H2. If they do, they’ll be cut off.”
I stare up at the ceiling. “So many people have died.”
Race grips the side railing of my bed. “And if you hadn’t figured out the lenses, every last one of us would have been wiped out. They could have cut our connection to the satellite shield and rendered it useless. But you prevented that.”
“It was my dad. My dad’s system.”
Race looks me right in the eye. “It was you who made it work. He didn’t do that for you. He left you the pieces, and you put them together.”
“I had plenty of help.” If it hadn’t been for Leo, I might still be trying to figure out the freaking password.
“But it wouldn’t have happened if not for you.”
“Exactly,” I whisper. “If I hadn’t stolen the scanner from my dad’s lab, none of this would have happened.”
His bloodshot gaze is steady on me. “That’s absolutely true. Your decision to steal the scanner set everything into motion.”
I swallow hard.
“And if you hadn’t done it, the invasion would be on schedule, and the Sicarii might have thoroughly infiltrated both sides by now, easing their path to planetary domination and the death of everyone on Earth.”
“What?”
“Tate, your father was aware of the anomalies and had created the defense system, but he didn’t have all the information he needed, because the Core had the other pieces of the puzzle. Your actions, rash as they were, with all those terrible consequences, were still the thing that brought the two sides together, and that’s the only thing that saved us.”
“That’s a pretty rosy interpretation of what I did.”
“‘Everything we do has a result. But that which is right and prudent does not always lead to good, nor the contrary to what is bad.’”
“Did you seriously just quote Goethe to me?”
He gives me a small smile. “Your father did a remarkable job with your education.”
“I know,” I say, feeling hollow. “I know.”
He shifts in his seat, looking uncomfortable. “Listen, I didn’t know Frederick Archer very well. On the few occasions I met him, we were on opposite sides of a deep divide. It is now very clear to me that he was a good man, and a brilliant one. Whether I pulled the trigger or not, I’m going to live with his death on my hands for the rest of my life, and that’s what I deserve.” He pauses, and I wait, my stomach tight. “So I don’t have the right to say what I’m going to say, but I’m going to do it anyway.” He clears his throat. “He would have been proud of you, Tate. You may have made mistakes, but you still honored his legacy and his name. He lives on through you.”
I suck in a breath, despite the heavy weight on my chest. “Everyone thinks he was a terrorist.”
“No. We have discredited that explanation of events. Bill made it a priority.”
“
Bill
did?” I have trouble imagining why that would be important to Congers.
Race sighs. “Bill lost his only son in that battle, Tate. And they left a lot of things unspoken between them. I think he’s trying to make up for that somehow. He won’t talk about it to anyone, but he’s taking Graham’s death hard.”
I close my eyes. I don’t want to think about the people we lost. There are too many. It’s overwhelming. “I think I need to rest,” I whisper.
I wince as Race’s chair scrapes against the floor. “Then I’ll leave you to it,” he says. “We’ll talk when you’re on your feet again. But, Tate?”
“Yeah?”
“Whatever happens from now on, I want you to know that I’m grateful to you. We all are.”
• • •
The conference room is packed as I walk in, slowly, with Christina’s hand in mine. Right now, I’m holding on to her as much for balance as for affection. I’m on my feet a lot more now, two days after I woke up “for good,” as Christina describes it, but I’ve still been sleeping a lot.
It’s time I start to help around here, though. Everybody’s been cleaning up the factory, and the people who don’t work here are getting ready to leave and return to their homes, their lives. This is the last thing we have to do before we say good-bye.
We have to say good-bye.
The massive circular table that usually sits in the center of the room is gone, replaced with row upon row of chairs. At the front of the room is a podium, surrounded by pictures. Brayton Alexander. Ellie Alexander. Aaron Bishop. Rufus Bishop. Graham Congers. Daniel Sung. Kellan Fisher. Leo Thomas. And so many others. The ones we lost, the heroes who fell. No separation between human and H2, no distinction.
We file past them, dozens of pictures, lined up in rows. Fingers reach out to stroke faces that we will never touch or see again. I stand for a long time in front of Leo’s picture, which will soon be hanging in the hall of the patriarchs next to his father’s. It’s so wrong, and everything about it hurts.
“If it hadn’t been for you, I wouldn’t have figured it out,” I say to him. “I’m going to miss you.” For the rest of my life, I’ll miss him. Christina leans her head on my shoulder and swipes a tear from her cheek.
All around me, others are mourning. Bill Congers’s jaw is clenched as he fights his own lonely sorrow. Race stands beside him, his mouth tight. I wonder if he’s thinking of his own son, if he’ll do things differently, if he’ll learn from me and my dad, from Congers and Graham. The mistakes we made and the opportunities we missed. I hope so.
As I turn to go to my seat, my mother is wheeled in by Dr. Ackerman. Her eyes are black, and she has a bandage over her nose and on the side of her face. She looks awful, but I grin as I break from the line to go to her. I so easily could have lost both my parents, but she’s made it through. Yesterday she told me she was arranging a sabbatical from Princeton so she could be in the city with me during my senior year. I have no idea how that’s going to go, but I’m thankful I have the chance to find out. “I didn’t think you were allowed out of bed,” I say as I lean down and kiss her cheek.