THUMP!
“That door can’t take too many of those,” I say.
Yellow grunts and pushes off of me, then jumps up and scrambles over to the bed. I watch her from the floor and push myself up. I’m torn between attacking her and sticking my hand in my gown, grabbing the necklace, and fleeing. But I do neither.
Instead I watch Yellow. I want someone else to know the truth.
She’s holding two files in her hands, and her eyes dart back and forth between them. She shakes her head, over and over and over. “This can’t be right. It can’t be.”
THUMP!
The door splinters and breaks.
Yellow looks at the door, then whips around to look at me, her eyes wide with shock. “We have to go!”
“I’m not going back with you.” I take out the necklace and pop open the lid.
Yellow holds up a hand. “Don’t go! Wait for me!”
“Huh?”
Yellow scoops up all the files and the notebook in her hands, then fiddles with her own watch. “Come back one month with me.”
“What?”
“I need more time to process this!” There’s another THUMP! The door gives way, and two burly security guards barrel into the room, followed by the nurse. Her face is red with anger.
“One month!” Yellow shouts. And then she shuts the watch and disappears—taking my files with her!
The security guards and the nurse stop in their tracks. They stare at the empty space where Yellow used to be and then look back at me.
“I’m sorry.” I know I’m about to give them their second shock, but I have to follow my files. There’s still more I have to know. So I turn the month dial back one click and shut the lid.
Searing pain rips across my entire body, but it only lasts for a second. And then I’m standing in the same hospital room.
“Finally!” Yellow whispers. She nods her head at the bed, where a very old woman is sleeping. She holds up the files. “Tell me you didn’t doctor these.”
“Excuse me?”
“You didn’t make these up, did you?”
“When the hell would I have found the time to do that? And why would I have done it?”
“So these are real? Your father and grandfather really were Annum Guard?”
“Looks like it.” I shake my head. “Listen, I’m just as stunned by the whole thing as you are. But something is going on over at Annum Guard, something they’re clearly not telling us. It’s all Alpha. I think the entire thing was a ploy to get me to kill Ariel Stender.”
“Who’s Ariel Stender?” Yellow asks.
“He created these.” I finger the watch hanging from my neck. “Alpha sent me back to try to convince him not to add the genetic link and then to kill him if he wouldn’t agree. I refused to do it. I was coming back to tell him that I failed, and that’s when I found the files. So Alpha set the whole thing up. But I don’t know why.”
Yellow’s mouth pops open into a little O. “Because Alpha can’t project.”
My stomach lurches. “What do you mean, Alpha can’t project?”
“Honestly, are you that dumb? You never wondered why he doesn’t go on any of the missions?”
I don’t even hear her insult. I’m too busy trying to process. “Alpha seriously can’t project?”
“No,” Yellow says. “He’s the government suit that oversees us. He’s the nongenetic link, there to keep us honest. Same thing with Red, who’s going to take over.”
“Wait, Red can’t project either?” I feel as if I’ve been slapped.
“Gosh, you’re slow. Red is being groomed to take over for Alpha. He’s a suit-in-training.”
The old lady in the bed twitches but doesn’t wake. I drop to a whisper. “I bet the switch is happening soon! I bet Alpha is being forced to retire, and that’s why he suddenly pulled me into all of this.”
Yellow shakes her head. “That doesn’t make sense. If you had the genetic makeup all along, why didn’t you grow up a part of it like we did?”
I shake my head, but in an instant I know. It’s like how your entire life is supposed to flash through your mind before you die. A bunch of images flood my memory, all of my mom.
I’m five years old. We’re at the local park, and I’m swinging as high as I can on the swings, trying to touch the sky. My mom is pushing up, up, as hard as she can. It’s a manic day, back when I was too young to know any better and thought the highs were fun. We’ve already been to the library, the ice cream shop, the toy store; and we spent more than an hour shopping for art supplies. There’s a brand-new canvas for me to throw paint on, too, next to hers in the back of the Jeep. And now we’re at the park.
A woman comes over and starts talking to us. I don’t remember what she says. But I do remember my mom’s reaction. She pushes the woman down to the ground and yanks me off the swing. She barks at the woman to never talk to me, to get the hell out of Jericho and never come back, and then she drags me home. I ask her who the woman is, and all she tells me is “She’s a bad person. Very bad. You stay away from her.”
I’m nine years old. I’m walking home from school when a white van pulls up next to me. It’s a man driving this time.
“Your mom is sick,” he tells me.
I keep walking.
“Your mom doesn’t have your best interests at heart,” he says. “You’re not where you should be.”
I run. Fast. I cut through the park, where there isn’t a road. The van screeches to a halt at the entrance but doesn’t try to follow me down the weathered, cracked sidewalk. I come out the other side and run straight home. At the time I thought the man was from DCF, a social worker called by one of Jericho’s know-it-all citizens, come to take me away from my mom.
It wasn’t.
I’m fourteen. My letter from Peel has arrived. My mom is locked in the bathroom. Her wailing moans travel down the hallway and into my bedroom. I catch bits and pieces. “They can’t.” “She’ll die.” “They’ll take her.”
At the time I think it’s just my mom being my mom. Emotional instability at its best. But it’s not. I get it now. It’s not. She knew about Annum Guard. My dad probably told her what he really did for a living. She knew that he died on a mission, but I doubt she knows the whole truth about his death.
But I do. And I know that my mom has spent her life trying to protect me from the same fate. She knew that if I went to Peel, I’d wind up in Annum Guard. But I thumbed my nose in her face and went anyway. I chose my fate and abandoned a very sick woman in the process. I am a horrible person.
When this is over—all over—I’m going back to Vermont. I’m going to make things right. I’m going to get her help, and then I’m going to fix us.
Yellow is staring at me, eyes wide, still waiting for an answer to her question.
“Because of my mom.” I rub my temples. I blamed her. For everything; for years and years and years I thought that she loved her precious artwork more than me, that I was a distant second. But she protected me. “My mom kept me away from the Guard. Or she tried to, at least. You all got to me eventually.”
Yellow looks down at her feet and blows out a long, sad breath. “I can’t believe this is happening. They lied to us, too. My freaking father lied to me.”
I feel my face recoil in horror. “You’re Alpha’s kid?” My voice is loud, and the old lady stirs.
“What? No.” Yellow drops her voice to a whisper. “Alpha doesn’t have children. My dad is Zeta.”
“Zeta!” The old lady stirs, and I drop my voice to a whisper, too. “No, that’s impossible. Zeta is Indigo’s dad.”
“Yeah, he’s called my brother.”
Yellow and Indigo are brother and sister? How did I not know this?