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Isle of Man Page 5


  “What about the submarine then?” I ask.

  “Research vessel,” he says. “The weapons on board are strictly defensive. We didn’t bother maintaining the fleet of ballistic submarines we found here, and they’ve long since been scuttled ... them being of little use in targeting ... ,” he pauses to look at Jimmy, “... ahem, well you know.”

  “But there must be some way to wrestle back control of the drones,” I say. “Some way to reset the system, maybe?”

  The professor covers his eyes with his fingers as if reading something written there. He inhales a long, deep breath, and when he removes his hands his bushy eyebrows are raise above wide, staring eyes.

  “We might try reloading the mastercode.”

  “What mastercode?” Hannah asks.

  “The software that runs the system,” the professor says. “But we’d need to get it first.”

  “Okay,” I say. “Where is it?”

  “In the basement.”

  “There’s a basement here?” Hannah asks.

  “Not here,” he says.

  “Then where?”

  “Holocene II.”

  “That’s perfect,” I say. “We need to free them anyway.”

  The professor jolts back so fast he bangs his head against the wall.

  “Free them?” he asks, rubbing the back of his head. “What in the name of science has gotten into you?”

  “Nothing’s gotten into me,” I say. “It simply isn’t right to keep them imprisoned down there.”

  “But they’re happy,” he says, a confused look on his face. “They have everything they need. They even have Eden to look forward to. Or at least they did. You can’t take their ignorance away from them. What right have you? You can’t burden them with the reality of their situation. It’s not humane.”

  I shake my head.

  “They’re not happy down there.”

  “How would you know?” he asks.

  “Because I’m from there.”

  “Oh,” he says, nodding, “you’re the boy Radcliffe brought up. He told us you were lost in that derailment.”

  “I was, but I found my way here.”

  He clucks his tongue and chuckles.

  “Of all the wild places in the world to end up. Don’t you sometimes think coincidence might just be us living out some cosmic destiny, over and over again, forwards and backwards, for eternity? It pains me to consider it, because this life really has been too long already. But you’ll never know the pain of living a millennium, will you? Or did Radcliffe already infect you with his serum?”

  I open my mouth to tell him we’ve all taken the serum, but Hannah jumps in: “Tell us more about the mastercode. Can we get it without letting anyone in Holocene II out?”

  I grab Hannah’s arm.

  “What are you saying?”

  “I know, Aubrey,” she says, pulling away. “We have to free them. I agree. But have you thought it through? We need to stop the drones first. There’s no room for everyone here. And there are no facilities for producing the things we need to survive, either. Think about it. Food, shelter, electricity. It’s all down in Holocene II. You can’t very well bring them up here to be slaughtered, can you?. The logical thing to do is deal with the drones first. Then we’ll devise a plan for reintroducing the people to the surface. Don’t you agree?”

  I have to admit, she makes some sense. I hadn’t thought about the logistics of bringing all those people up. I have an image of thousands of them stumbling around, confused and blinded by the sun, drones picking them off like eagles hunting fish caught in a puddle. She’s right. We have no real system of government, no infrastructure, no formal economy.

  The professor’s voice snaps me back to the room: “Well, we have visited Holocene II undetected before. We control the train from here, for obvious reasons. And that’s on a different system than the drones. The transfer station is vacated and locked down during rest hours. Elevator takes us to six, where another goes to the basements. Timing is critical, but it can be done. If that’s what you really want?”

  Hannah raises her hand.

  “I vote we do that.”

  I look at Jimmy. He shakes his head.

  “What are you thinking, Jimmy?”

  “It ain’t our call to make.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “I mean, we always done stuff by vote.”

  “But we’re voting now,” Hannah says.

  “We is,” Jimmy replies. “But they ain’t.” He points down.

  “But they’re not prepared to deal with this,” she says.

  “Why do we get to decide that for ’em?”

  “Whatever,” Hannah sighs, turning to me. “It’s up to you then, Aubrey. You’re the tie breaker.”

  I’m torn. I agree with Jimmy in theory. It isn’t our decision to make on behalf of the people of Holocene II. But I also see Hannah’s point. And no way do I want to be responsible for all those people starving to death up here. Or freezing. Or being slaughtered by drones, even. I reach into my pocket and grip my father’s pipe. What would he do? I remember him telling me to always trust my heart.

  “The brain is a powerful servant but a heartless master,” he’d always say. But then I think of that day I saw him for the last time. The day he walked right into Eden to be slaughtered. I tried to tell him that we’d been lied to. I tried to reason with his mind. But his heart was set on meeting my mother, and it clouded his judgment. If he’d only listened to his mind instead of his heart, he might still be alive.

  “Sorry, Jimmy, I’m with Hannah.”

  Jimmy looks at me and shakes his head slowly.

  “Figures,” he says. Then he storms from the room and slams the door.

  I start after him, but Hannah calls me back.

  “Let him vent, Aubrey. That all can wait. We need to make some decisions here.”

  “All right. I can catch up with him later, I guess.”

  “Tell us about this mastercode,” Hannah says.

  “It’s quite simple, really,” the professor replies. “With the mastercode we should be able to restore the system and reclaim control of the drones.”

  “Then could we change their mission and stop the killing?” I ask. “Or even call them all home and retire them?”

  “Well, there’s not room enough for them all here at once,” he says, “but I see no reason why we couldn’t reprogram them to cease their fire and observe only. Then, as they cycle home for maintenance, you could certainly disarm them.”

  “Or maybe we keep them armed for defensive purposes?” Hannah suggests.

  “Defense against what?” I ask.

  “I don’t know,” she says. “But I agree that we need to stop this senseless slaughter immediately.”

  “And what about freeing my people?”

  “Let’s focus on one thing at a time,” she says. “As soon as the drones are under our control again, we can put our heads together and come up with a plan for that.”

  “I’m only going along with this if we all agree: as soon as the drones are stopped, we tell the people of Holocene II the truth, and we set them free. Deal or no deal?”

  “Fine,” Hannah says. “Agreed.”

  “Professor?”

  “Fine with me,” he says.

  “Okay then. When can we leave?”

  The professor glances at his wrist then looks puzzled by the fact that he isn’t wearing a watch. He leans forward and reads the time on the bottom edge of a screen. Then he closes his eyes and talks to himself.

  “If we call the train now ... five hours up makes nineteen hundred ... rest hours begin at sixteen hundred ... twenty-seven ... subtract five hours down ... twenty-two. We can leave in twenty-two hours.”

  “There was an easier way to do that,” Hannah says.

  “Yes, well ... arithmetic never was my strong suit.”

  “But you’re a physicist.”

  “Theoretical physicist, young lady. Theoretical.”
>
  I leave them to bicker about math while I go to look for Jimmy. I have a sinking feeling even before reaching the docks. The boat is gone, and Jimmy and Junior are gone with it.

  I look across the empty, underground bay at the mouth of the tunnel leading to the locks. It’s seems like an evil archway through which my departing hope has passed. My instinct is for pursuit, but I quickly realize the powerlessness of my situation. I’m trapped. Jimmy’s gone up there, and I’m stuck down here. While the submarine can pass through the miles of step locks down to the Pacific, it is much too large to pass through the upper locks to the lake. I could build a boat, maybe, but there’s no time. We leave on the train for Eden in 22 hours.

  Several hours pass as I sit on the deserted dock and rerun everything Jimmy and I have been through. That delirious first encounter by the sea. Him teaching me to catch pigeons. The cove. Learning to swim. The horror of the drones slaughtering his family. The bodies and the blood. I remember tending his infected leg and praying to anything that might hear me to restore his health. I remember our long, depressing days of mourning as Jimmy recovered from his wounds in the cliff-side caves. I remember crossing the mountains together, and finding Junior on the trail. And as much as I don’t want to, I remember betraying Jimmy when we first arrived at the lake house—lying, conniving, caught up in Hannah’s spell and conspiring with Dr. Radcliffe. It’s unforgiveable, really. But Jimmy did forgive me when he saved my life in that river. And he helped me blow up Eden; he helped me free my folks.

  I feel Hannah’s hand on my shoulder, and I’m suddenly aware of the cold. She sits down and puts her arm around me. I’d rather blame her than blame myself for Jimmy’s leaving, and I’m prepared to yell at her the second that she speaks. But she doesn’t say a word—she just sits beside me on the dock and stares across the bay at the empty tunnel, looking sad herself.

  CHAPTER 4

  Returning to Holocene II

  “Did we really need all this?”

  The professor hefts another pallet from the train onto the platform.

  “Most of it,” he says. “But we also needed a reason to call up the train ahead of its scheduled monthly visit. You of all people should know how important routine is down there.”

  When the last of the supplies are finally offloaded, we eat a quick meal then retire to our bunks for some rest before the journey down to Holocene II. The professor has moved back into his room in the living quarters, so it’s just Hannah and me left in the submarine. She makes an attempt to crawl in with me, but the bunks are just too narrow, and she jumps into the upper bunk and falls asleep within minutes.

  I toss and turn beneath her.

  Several times I get up and climb the ladder to the hatch and look out toward the tunnel, hoping to see Jimmy returning. But each time I’m alone with the eerie LED glow and the distant sound of dripping water. When I do get to sleep, it’s restless, with dreams of Jimmy being killed by drones, or eaten by bears, so I’m grateful when the professor pokes his head into our bunkroom and announces that it’s time to leave.

  Hannah and I pull on our new zipsuits, brought up on the train from Holocene II. It feels funny to be wearing one again after all that time nearly naked in the cove, and later wearing Dr. Radcliffe’s hand-me-down clothes. But while I’m clawing at the closed neck and uncomfortable, Hannah seems to be happy to have shed the threadbare dress she’d been wearing, admiring herself in her new zipsuit from every angle in the small mirror.

  My pipe feels bulky in my zipsuit pocket, but I don’t want to take it with me down to Holocene II anyway. If something happens, at least my father’s pipe won’t be buried down there forever with me. I remember Jimmy’s look of shame that day in the cove as he apologized for stealing my pipe—shame over something so silly when I have done so much worse. I wish he were here now so I could tell him what he means to me. So I could give him the pipe to keep as a token of my thanks. He deserves it. He’s a better man than I am.

  I tuck the pipe and case of tobacco in a drawer beneath my bunk and head up with Hannah. I stop at the edge of the dock for one last look, before Hannah tugs me along by my sleeve.

  Boarding the train is hard. I remember climbing in on the day I left Holocene II, and I remember Dorian with his clipboard locking me inside for the ride. I remember the terrible accident that came like a surprise bomb while I slept in my seat. And I remember crawling through the crippled car to get free.

  The professor shuts the train car door, and I’m immediately claustrophobic. My heart pumps with panic, my head pounds with pain. What am I thinking? Back in a zipsuit and heading down to Holocene II? Remember the reasons, I tell myself. We’re going to save lives. I sit in a metal seat and rest my head between my legs and breathe—I breathe good energy in, and I breathe bad energy out.

  Hannah sits beside me for a while, but I’m in no mood to talk, and eventually she goes and sits next to the professor and they discuss the plan. I never knew five hours could last so long. I can feel the train moving deeper, as if the weight of the rock above were somehow increasing the air pressure as we descend. Fortunately, I drift in and out of a restless sleep, and just as I finally give up on wondering when we’ll arrive, I feel myself press back into the seat as the train glides to a stop.

  The door lock clicks free, and the professor stands and grabs the handle.

  “Straight to the elevators now,” he warns, looking back at Hannah and me before opening the door.

  We cross the dim-lit loading dock like thieves, walking on our tiptoes even though it’s deserted. When we arrive at the elevators, they stand waiting and open, their polished steel interiors reflecting back our warbled shadows as we pass. The professor counts them off out loud, ushering us into the sixth. He reaches into his pocket and pulls out his hand, staring at his empty palm. He searches himself with increasing panic.

  “Frickle nick. I just knew it. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Wait. Aha! There you are.” He produces a keycard from some hidden pocket in the folds of his coveralls and waves the card in front of the panel. The doors slide shut, and the elevator begins its long descent.

  “Why this elevator?” Hannah asks.

  The professor waves his card. “Other than our once a year population exchange, only freight elevators operate between the levels. They’re direct shafts, each connecting only one level to the transfer station.”

  “But why?” she asks.

  “Well, to provide a modicum of control, I guess. It helps to prevent fraternization between levels.”

  “Smart,” she says, nodding.

  I shake my head.

  “Cruel is more like it.”

  The elevator drops for a long time. Maybe three minutes, if I were counting. When it finally stops, the doors don’t open.

  “Oh, no,” I say. “Here we go again.”

  Hannah opens her mouth to ask me what I mean, but her question is cut off by the blast of disinfecting gas rushing into the elevator. She panics, just like I did my first time, and backs away from the vent. But there’s nowhere to go. The professor’s smile disappears in the white cloud, and I reach for Hannah and try to comfort her as I suck the gas in and try not to cough.

  When the doors open, we pile out into the dim gray glow of the all-too-familiar LED lights and cough out the inhaled gas, fighting to catch our breath. Hannah looks upset, but she sucks it up without a word and walks with us onto a grated bridge. Below us, a channel of murky water meanders through the dim valley. I’m overwhelmed by the smell of human waste.

  Hannah plugs her nose.

  “What is this place?”

  “Sewage treatment level,” I say, happy to know more than she does for once.

  She points down.

  “You mean to tell me that that’s crap?”

  The professor laughs.

  “That’s just gray water, young lady. The crap is coming up soon enough.”

  We wind our way over various walkways, past windowless buildings and islands of pipes and valves
that seem to sprout from the ground. The rotten smell builds steadily as we go until the professor stops on a high bridge and points down to an enormous field of circular pools, bubbling and burping out hideous gases that are sucked up by giant vent hoods hovering above them like hungry, mechanical mouths.

  “Gross,” Hannah moans, her fingers still clasped on her nose. “This is disgusting.”

  “There’s nothing disgusting about the beauty of bacteria, young lady,” the professor says, playfully tapping her nose. “Did you know there are more bacteria cells in your own body than there are human cells? We have more in common with those fellas feasting on our shit down there than we do with anything else in the world up there.”

  “What do they do with the methane?” I ask.

  “Good question,” he says, smiling at me. “It’s looped back and burned to heat the pools, thus speeding the decomposition process in a self-encouraging cycle.”

  “Very smart,” I say, genuinely impressed. “You know all those years growing up on Level 3, I never even thought about what they did with our waste.”

  The professor nods.

  “Nobody ever does.”

  “Can we keep moving?” Hannah asks.

  Once past the main treatment station, we cross another bridge and follow a footpath on the inside edge of the cavern. It is worn smooth as glass by a thousand years of boot marks left by workers trudging to their daily grind. As we round a bend, I get a glimpse down into the cavern valley where small apartment buildings cluster around an open square, their yellow windows appearing to wink as the residents’ shadows cross in front of the backlit shades.

  “Shouldn’t the residences be on higher ground than the treatment plant?” I ask.

  The professor shakes his head.

  “Methane rises.”

  After we pass the fork leading to the valley of apartments, the path turns hard left, and we enter a tunnel in the cavern wall. Unlike the well-worn workers’ path, the tunnel seems neglected, mostly because of trash lying in corners and graffiti written on the walls. I notice one tag in particular that reads: JAMES + ERICA FOREVER, with a chalk line through “Erica” and the name BETH scrawled above it.