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Authors: Beth Revis

Shades of Earth (31 page)

BOOK: Shades of Earth
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“You heard Colonel Martin,” Chris says, his voice crackling over the intercom. “He intends to fire the weapon.”

“You killed my mother because she was on a ship to the space station.” Amy's voice is hollow now. “She just happened to be there. She had nothing to do with the bomb. But you killed her. You killed nearly five hundred people!”

“It wasn't just me!” There's panic in his voice now, fear. “I've reported everything back to my people. They—they think you're with the FRX, that you'll do whatever they say. And they're right, aren't they? Colonel Martin
was
going to set the bomb off. And he still plans on doing it.”

“If he's even alive anymore!” Amy shouts. “You told your little friends about the plan with the flowers. That's how they knew to wear gas masks.” A pause—much longer than I'd like. “That's what they were wearing, right? Gas masks? Pretty convenient that they made them look like ‘real' aliens.”

Amy taunts him, the way that she says the word
real
, and I'm so worried about what Chris will do next that I can barely breathe. I don't know what she's talking about now, but I know that if nothing else, I've got to do
something
.

My knuckles are white, gripping the edge of the console. I have never,
never
felt so helpless. I think about the escape rocket Chris showed me, the thing I'm supposed to use if something goes wrong. Maybe I can use it to go to the space station.

I can set the weapon off.

I don't want to kill them all. I don't believe in the FRX, and I don't want to be responsible for the deaths of countless people, especially innocent, mindless drones already destroyed by Phydus.

I look at the little brown book that was in the box with the AV display from the Plague Eldest. In that book is the formula for Inhibitor meds. There's a chance. . . .

“It's us or you,” Chris says, his voice high.

“Only because that's what you've decided.”

“Colonel Martin has made it clear, time and time again, that if he can, he will use the weapon. It will
always
be a threat he can control. And when the FRX gets here—because they
are
coming, Colonel Martin made sure of that—they will kill anyone else they can find. This is about
survival
. This is our
home
, and you are the trespassers.” He says the words as if they are weapons, each syllable another stab, each pause a blow.

“Don't—” Amy says, squeaking in terror for the first time. “Please, don't.”

And I know: she's begging for her life.

I flip on the intercom.
“WAIT!”
I bellow.

65:
AMY

Chris looks from me to the intercom
and back to me. He'd forgotten about the communication link; he didn't realize I'd kept it going.

He grips the gun in his hand.

“If you kill Amy,” Elder says through the intercom, his voice filled with passion and rage, “I
will
kill you. I will take the shuttle straight to the space station, and I'll set off the biological bomb, and you and all your people will die.”

Chris does not lower the gun.

“But if you let her live,” Elder says, “I will land this shuttle. We've found more than just the video from the Plague Eldest. We also found the formula for the Inhibitor medicine we developed to counteract the effects of Phydus.”

“A . . . a cure?” Chris says. The end of the rifle dips as he starts to lower the gun. “You'll be able to fix my people, the other hybrids?”

The door to the communication room bangs open, and my father races inside. “You bastard!” he shouts, slamming into Chris and knocking him to the floor. The rifle skitters away. Chris shakes Dad off and lunges for it.

“Amy? Amy! What's happening?” Elder says anxiously over the intercom.

I rip my .38 out and aim it at the floor, near the rifle, my finger already pulling the trigger. The bullet embeds itself in the ground, and Chris stops. He turns around to see me, my finger on the trigger, my gun aimed at his chest. Dad gets up and grabs the rifle.

“We've got Chris,” I tell Elder.

“You're okay?”

“I'm fine.”

Dad sits down at the communication bay. “Just so you know,” Dad tells Chris over his shoulder, “I never really trusted you.”

I don't know how true that is—I think Dad
did
trust Chris, rather a lot. Not at first—Chris didn't have a gun that first day. But later, Dad
wanted
to trust him. It's the only reason I can see why Chris has been able to deceive him for so long. That, or Dad's planning something. I watch them both carefully, waiting for the moment when Dad will strike.

“You were working with the FRX,” Chris says. “I knew better than to ever put my faith in you.”

“Yeah, well, now we're going to have the FRX kill you all, so there's some comfort in that. For me, anyway.” There's a smirk of triumph on Dad's face as his fingers punch the numbers and letters on the screen to enable the remote detonation of the bomb on the space station.

“Wait!” Chris says. He makes a move to reach for Dad, but I adjust my position, making sure he remembers me and my .38. “Just—I want to show you who you'll be killing first. We have video feed from security cams—you can access them from here.”

Dad's gaze flicks to me. There are black gunpowder marks on his hands and face, and I notice a bloodstain on his left shoulder. He must have barely escaped the fighting at the colony. And for him to leave the colony to come here, the fighting had to have been bad. Setting off the bomb must be his last chance.

“How's the colony?” I ask softly.

“Mostly prisoners,” he says.

“Prisoners,” Chris says. “
Prisoners.
We tried not to kill—”

“You didn't try that hard,” Dad says. “Not in this battle and not before, not with Emma or Dr. Gupta or the shipborns or the five hundred people in the auto-shuttle
including my wife, you sick bastard
.”

Dad looks so—I can't even describe it, the rage on his face, the fury in his eyes. I think he would kill Chris right now, with his bare hands, if I weren't here.

Chris's body sags in defeat. “Just—just look at the security feed of the city, where the other hybrids live,” he says.
“Please.”

I nod to Dad. I want to see.

Dad scrolls through the menus on the control panel, finding the security feed. After a moment, the screen comes to life.

The city the hybrids live in must be in the valley of the mountain range I spotted well beyond the colony and the lake—that's why we never noticed it before. I can see tall, jagged mountains rising in the background.

There's no sound on the video. But I think even if there was, there would be little to hear. The people on the streets move robotically, emotionless. They stare straight ahead as they walk. The screen shifts from camera to camera, showing a street, a packaging factory, people pushing wheelbarrows full of yellow sand, a glassmaking factory. The people in the factory are hand-blowing glass sculptures. They move methodically, with perfect rhythm, as they make dozens of identical glass figurines—flowers of some kind. If I had just seen the glass flowers by themselves, without knowing how they were made, I would call them works of art. They are perfectly balanced, delicate and lovely, with a string of liquid gold inside that I know won't fade—it will make the flowers glow from within, lit petals that almost look alive. But having seen them made with such emotionless exactitude, the flowers now look creepy and false.

“They're all like that,” Chris says after we stare at the screen. “Thousands of people, born to be slaves, so used to rote repetition that if something goes wrong, they don't know what to do and so they end up injuring themselves or . . . ” Chris stands up, glancing at the screen with the glassblowers, “dying. Sometimes, they stick their hands in the fire or touch the molten glass without gloves. They only know how to work, and if their tongs go missing, they work with their bare hands. They don't know any better because the FRX has ensured they'll never rebel, they'll never think for themselves.”

I have seen this before. On
Godspeed
. I'd hated it there, but I hate it more here.

“Every few years, representatives from the FRX come and check up on us, make sure that everyone's still working, still controlled. If they see any children like me—born without the control of Phydus—they just kill them. I watched them kill my little sister. They shot her in the head, and they left her on the street, and everyone on Phydus just stepped over her body until it rotted away.”

I swallow dryly.

“This is what I wanted you to see,” Chris says to back of Dad's head. “I wanted you to know what organization you're supporting.”

Dad swipes his hand across the screen, making it go dark.

“At least they're alive,” he says bitterly. “Unlike my Maria. You've killed too many of my people for me to have any sympathy for yours.”

Dad's hands move quickly, tapping codes onto the screen and swiping across new menus.

“What are you doing?” Chris says urgently. He steps forward. I wiggle my gun at him, making him freeze.
“What are you doing?”
he asks again, fear in his voice.

“I'm arming the bomb,” Dad says matter-of-factly.

“You're committing
genocide!

“I'm protecting my people,” Dad says. “What's left of them after
you
tried to kill them all.”

Something on the screen beeps, and Dad starts pressing more buttons.

There's a bang on the door, and I turn, startled. Chris takes that moment to knock aside my arm, making me drop the .38. We both dive for it. Dad lunges for Chris—and that's what saves his life. A second later, the glass window over the communication bay shatters and three men in camouflage suits—I can't believe I'd thought they were green scaly aliens—jump through it. They step over the control panel, and I hear Elder call out my name in a desperate cry as the red flashing light that shows his communication link with us cuts out.

I wonder if that was the last time I'll hear Elder's voice, if this is the point when I die.

One of the men rips Dad off Chris, and Chris stands—with my .38 in his hand, pointed at me. The men are all tall—taller even than Elder—but much stockier, with muscles that look like carved stone under their skintight shirts. But Dad doesn't cower before them, and neither do I.

“This ends now,” one of the men in camo says. He points his own gun at Dad, a weapon that is slim and light, with disks inside it instead of bullets. He wears more ammo around his waist—rows of thin, flat glass circles that glow golden. I gasp. This is a weapon that uses more of that exploding glass, and the disks . . . they're the exact size and shape of the scale Elder found in the tunnel. But it wasn't a scale. It was part of a weapon. And it won't just kill Dad—it'll blow him apart.

The man who spoke dips his head at Dad in a mock show of civility. “I am in charge of the rogue hybrids.” I notice his crystal-blue eyes, his oval irises identical to Chris's. Now that I see them on a stranger, I'm even more shaken that I never let myself recognize just how unusual they were.

The two other men with him stand on either side of the communication bay, their own guns out.

“I am the leader of the people you've tried to kill,” Dad says.

The man barks in laughter. “You have courage, I'll give you that. It is your misfortune that you landed your shuttle now. A few decades earlier, and there wouldn't have been as many of us. A few decades later, and the revolution would be over. We could have been friends then. But now? Now you're aligned with the FRX, and we can't have that.” He sneers at Dad. “You're going to do two things for us,” he says.

“I would rather die than do anything for you,” Dad growls.

The rogue leader looks at Chris. Chris steps forward until the round end of the barrel of my .38 is pressed against my temple. I can feel the cool metal circle digging into my skull; I can smell the remains of gun oil and powder.

“What do you want me to do?” Dad says.

“We'll start with your surrender. You're going to call the FRX from this compound, and you're going to issue your surrender to me and my people on your behalf
and
on the behalf of the FRX.”

“They'll come anyway,” Dad says.

“The only weapon that could do us any harm is the biological bomb. We've been stockpiling solar bombs for decades. Not to mention all the human hostages we'll have to negotiate with. Without the biological weapon, they don't stand a chance against us.”

My stomach drops. Outside the window, the world is calm and peaceful. I imagine it exploding, torn apart by bombs and warfare.

Dad sits back down at the communication bay, wiping away the shards of glass scattered over it. We all watch as he types in his military codes.

“The disarmament function isn't there . . . ” the rogue leader says. “What are you
doing
?” A new voice fills the communication room. “Colonel Martin, we have received your distress call,” a voice says. “The FRX stands ready to aid you.”

“The hybrids have taken over!” Dad shouts as the rogue leader lunges for him.

“Do you want us to remotely activate the biological bomb?” the man on the other end of the line says. His voice is utterly emotionless. “Please give your military authorization code.”

“No!” the rogue leader shouts. He shoves Dad away from the communication center.

“Zero-alpha-four-two-gamma,” Dad shouts. Half of the ten-digit code.

The rogue leader slams his fist into Dad's face before he can finish speaking. The two of them grapple a moment, Dad's hands around the man's right arm, trying to wrest the weapon free—then the solar gun goes off, exploding a hole into the side of the building. Dad finally knocks it away from the rogue leader's hands. One of the other men that came into the communication building with the rogue leader jumps into the battle. Chris watches, my .38 pressed hard against my head.

“Please note,” the voice on the intercom says, “without the full code we will not authorize the remote launch of the bombs. We do not wish to destroy our slave labor force except as a last resort.”

And I know: the people who sent us here in the first place, the ones that promised to protect us, have absolutely no problem sacrificing us. Not if it would mess up their “production.” They would much rather have us and the rogue hybrids kill each other off than to lose all the resources they could harvest from the planet. Using Phydus—if anything, that would solve their problems for them.

The third man who came into the communication building with the others steps toward Chris and me. His neck muscles are tense, and he seems to be silently asking Chris some sort of question.

Chris nods, then turns to me. “You know what? I thought . . . I thought we could be something.”

“We can
never
be what you want us to be.”

Chris sneers. “Because I'm a hybrid?” he asks. “Or because of that
boy
?” I wonder if he even notices that he's used the same word to describe Elder that my dad uses.

I glare at him, hoping he can see the hate in my eyes. “Your DNA has nothing to do with the reason why Elder's a better man than you.”

The other hybrid has moved out of my line of vision. I gasp in pain as something sharp pierces my arm. The man grabs hold of my shoulder firmly, digging his fingers into my arm so that, between his grip and the gun at my head, I cannot move.

But I can tell what's happening. The other man has a syringe, and I can feel icy-hot liquid being injected into my bloodstream.

The rogue leader and his lackey have Dad back under control, and they slam him into the chair and turn his body to look at me.

The liquid feels like ice, and I have a sudden and sickening flashback to being pumped full of cryo liquid.

“What is that? What are you doing to my daughter?” Dad roars, trying to jump up and save me, but the rogue leader throws him back, grinning maliciously.

“In just a few moments, she won't be human anymore. Not genetically at least. You set that bomb off, you kill her as well. She's a hybrid now too.”

“No!” Dad jumps up, throwing the rogue leader out of his way. “Amy!”

My eyes are burning, streaming with water. I squeeze them shut, unable to bear how bright the light is.

BOOK: Shades of Earth
6.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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