Название: The Remnant
Автор: Laura Nolen Liddell
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Зарубежная фантастика
isbn: 9780008113636
isbn:
Things were looking up.
Isaiah, it turned out, was waiting patiently at the end of a long, double row of Remnant guards.
I had never seen a Remnant guard in livery before, but these were dressed in black, Central Command-issued uniforms. The kind that blocked bullets. I spared a moment of appreciation for Isaiah’s people, who had probably gone to some trouble to procure them, while simultaneously suppressing a shudder at the memories the uniforms evoked. The result was something like an ungainly shrug.
If anything, it should have been encouraging. It meant the Remnant had conducted raids on Command supplies. It meant they hadn’t given up.
“Nice outfit,” I said to the first. She closed the bin door behind me without responding.
“You all right?” Isaiah asked me.
“Yep,” I said slowly, eyeing his army of personal guards. “Just fine.”
“Get the team out here,” he said to the guard nearest him. “Have it locked. Let’s go.”
The guard behind me took my arm, and I jerked away. “Hands off.”
She sighed and turned to Isaiah expectantly, giving me a clear view of the shock of bright red hair sticking out from under her cap.
“She’ll be fine, Mars.”
The guard lifted her hands in resignation. “After you,” she said tersely.
“Wait,” I said, studying her face. “I remember you.” She’d been at Isaiah’s side when he came to retrieve me from Central Command during the battle, to beg me to return to the Remnant with him. I hadn’t exactly come quietly, so to speak.
She raised an eyebrow. “Congratulations.”
Our little tussle had ended with her on the ground, unconscious, thanks in no small part to Isaiah, who’d turned on her at the last minute to keep her from hurting me further. I gave her a fake smile to go with her sarcasm. She did not return it.
As we wove through the bins, the guards flanked Isaiah and spread out ahead of him. They’d clearly had some practice with their formation. I tried to fall in with the ones right behind him, but they kept slowing down at the end of each bin, checking the aisles before allowing Isaiah to proceed through the intersection, so I kept nearly tripping. To make things worse, “Mars” seemed not to want me to walk directly behind Isaiah, so she kept placing a hand on my arm whenever he stopped. I kept right on knocking it away. She’d give a little snort, and we’d start walking again. It was all a little awkward, to be honest.
After about the fourth snort, Isaiah turned around.
“Why don’t you walk up here, Charlotte? Give me someone to talk to.”
“Sir, I really can’t advise—” Mars began.
“It’s fine,” he said shortly.
She sighed again, and I avoided shooting her a smug look as I sped up to take Isaiah’s outstretched arm.
“Hey, you think you’ve got enough guards?” I asked, not quietly.
Isaiah chuckled. “My jail must not be so bad, since you’re still telling jokes. They’re doing their job. This area is not under control, at the moment,” he said grimly. “Not yet, anyway.”
“Don’t you have a ceasefire?”
“It’s more than just that. There are lockies, some of which are ours, and another group we’ve tried to monitor,” he said.
“What other group?”
“We don’t know. Some kind of soldier-types. They come out at night. Probably just part of Central Command, but we can never prove it.”
We fell into step, and I remembered the way it felt to hold his hand back on Earth, when everything was dying all around us. I gave his arm a little squeeze, and he leaned in to me and spoke quietly. “You shouldn’t give Marcela a hard time.”
“I know, I know. She’s just doing her job.”
“Well,” said Isaiah, “Sure. But she’s not so bad, if you get to know her.”
“Pass.”
“All right, then. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
I was still trying to figure out exactly what he had warned me about when we came to the end of the cargo hold. But instead of the dark space that led to the Remnant, we were someplace I’d never been.
The Ark was shaped like a huge, flat wheel, with the cargo stored in the large outer rim. The wheel was divided into sectors, like slices of a pie, and it spun as it traveled through space, which gave the effect of gravity. Unfortunately, the passengers who were farthest out experienced far more gravity than those toward the center of the Ark, the “sweet spot.” Every last member of the Remnant was an illegal passenger—a stowaway—and they inhabited the outer rim of Sector Seven. During the battle, Isaiah and Adam had cut the air to the rest of the Ark using a life-support program I’d helped steal: the Noah Board. If they hadn’t done that, the Remnant wouldn’t have stood a chance against Central Command.
The corridor was well-lit and industrial in nature, save for the patterned weave on the carpet beneath us. We were still on the thick outer rim of the Ark, where Central Command considered the gravity too heavy for living quarters. I guessed it had belonged to them, but like I said, the Remnant had secured it—and their continued existence—during the battle. Two of his guards rushed ahead with key cards, and a series of doors slid apart before us. Isaiah barely broke his stride before reaching the door of his choice.
We entered a small room with a thin metal platform, which Isaiah led me to.
“We’re gonna need a better grip,” he said, and pulled me toward him. His fingers found the wire around my waist, and he gave me a silent look through his dark glasses.
Four guards joined us on the platform, Marcela among them, and Isaiah reached past her to hold a thick cable at one corner.
“Ready, sir?” called a guard from the doorway.
“Let ’er rip,” said Isaiah.
I realized, too late, that we were standing on a sort of elevator, and it shot down into the black shaft beneath us before I was ready. I lost my footing, but Isaiah’s arm was solid around me.
I shrugged it off in a sudden surge of inexplicable anger. I hardly needed his help to stand up. When we passed the next floor, there was an instant flash of visibility from the light on its door, and I noticed Marcela’s arm hovering around my other side, carefully not touching me. I upgraded my opinion of her by a tenth of a point, then remembered her kick to my arm during our little scuffle several weeks ago and slid it right back down again.
“I really wish I could see the look on your face right now,” said Isaiah.
“I’ve СКАЧАТЬ