Resonance by J. B. Everett (books for 7th graders .TXT) đ
- Author: J. B. Everett
Book online «Resonance by J. B. Everett (books for 7th graders .TXT) đ». Author J. B. Everett
He wished that just for a moment he could tip his head back and be blissfully unaware, and enjoy the weather and the coming season. But he had worked hard and was still paying good money for the privilege of having his ignorance stripped away. So he simply opened the driver side door and she followed suit. They drove along, neither of them saying a word until they hit the west entrance of Main. The Kingsport D.O.T. roadblock still stood where they had left it, and Jordan looked specifically for horse tracks this time but saw none.
Meticulously laying out yards of the tape, Jordan hoped that being this far backwoods they wouldnât wind up with a bad case of media crawling all over them. He and Jillian were both trained in what to say and how to refuse interviews should the news vans appear like vultures circling the town edges. He also knew how to keep things quiet and pray.
He was winding the last piece of red tape around the orange and white barricade, when he heard the gasp.
Knowing it didnât sound right, but having no other explanation, he looked up at Jilly, who was looking straight at him. They both turned to find a redheaded girl wearing jeans and low pigtails with a smattering of freckles just across the bridge of her nose. Jillianâs expression gave away that she was rapidly searching her brain for a hint of recognition. Jordan knew instantly that he had never seen this girl before.
âUm?â Even with just that sound, it was clear that she wasnât the girl he had first thought her to be. After her next sentence it was clear from her accent that she wasnât a local and she was well educated. âI think you just taped my car in⊠. I ⊠I have lab specimens in the front seat.â
She looked back and forth. âOh dear God, whatâs biohazardous in there?â
Jordanâs eyes narrowed, she didnât sound scared. But excited. Intrigued. And she was carefully trying to cover it. Jillian didnât catch that. She offered her most soothing tone, a mother to her child after a bad round of nightmares. âOh, thatâs just to keep people out.â
As the girl wiped her hand off on her jeans, he watched her stance shift. She knew what she was about and she held the cleaned hand out to him. âDr. Rebecca Sorenson, UT Biodiversity Laboratories. And you are?â
She said it with a lilt - that upward turn at the end af all sentences that females used to play inferior to their male counterparts. And she used it very well. Jordan heard the confidence behind it. She had known she didnât look the part. And he glanced down at his own sweatshirt and now dirty sneakers just briefly before sticking his own hand out to take hers.
He spoke quickly enough to divert the doctorâs eyes from Jillyâs surprised expression. âDr. Jordan Abellard.
CDCP Atlanta.â He motioned to Jillian, who thankfully now had it together.
âThis is Dr. Jillian Brookwood, my colleague.â
âBecky.â Dr. Sorenson corrected as she slipped her grip out of his and transferred the handshake to Jillian.
And just as quickly as she gave a good hard quick stare, indicating that she knew the score and sheâd play fairly, she spoke again. âI wonât go to the media.â
âThank you.â Jillianâs voice held unknown volumes of relief.
âAre people sick?â Becky looked them both in the eyes again. If he didnât answer her straight he would have to simply say he wouldnât tell her.
So he gave her one word. âDying.â And ignored Jillianâs combined look of surprise and disapproval, but he saw that disappear even as he looked away and ignored her.
Becky turned the conversation toward him. Like Jordan, she knew an ally. âWhy arenât you in full suits?â Then she answered her own question. âWeâve already been exposed.â
She didnât show the emotion he expected.
But he nodded, confirming her answer.
âItâs contagious.â Her eyes wandered, focusing far away. And in a moment he realized that she was listening. And she frowned. Becky mumbled a word that sounded like âwarblersâ but he didnât know what that meant. She looked him in the eyes again. âWanna share?â
âYes.â
Jillian hid her shock better this time.
Becky sighed. âI have a series of mutated frogs and other species. Youâre standing in a spot that I just realized today when I came in has a reversed magnetic field.â
Jillianâs voice finally cut into the conversation. âWe know.â
Jillian paced the room, finally keyed up enough to ignore her hideous surroundings. The bed still had not been fixed. And she desperately wanted to sit on it, lay back and maybe even cry. But she knew from experience that that would lead to rolling off. Which led to humiliation and frustration. And she couldnât sit in that horrible little ladder-backed chair for another moment. So she forced her feet to keep going. At least she would sleep at the end of this interminable day.
The motion served another purpose, siphoning off energy that she would gladly use to fillet Jordan alive. He had simply opened his fat mouth and spouted off to some girl with no ID a good portion of what the CDC knew, and what they didnât. And Jillian had no idea what reasoning he had. If any.
Not that they had been able to talk. Jordan had brought the girl back with them, and even called James Hann to see if they had a spare room for Miss Becky. Dr. Rebecca Sorenson and her mutated frogs had just left, finally, headed out to the Whippoorwill Inn. And Jordan sat in the wooden chair, re-reading printouts like the case was closed.
Jillian bit her tongue. She swallowed repeatedly. She pressed her lips together, as though that might keep it all down. But she knew better and of course it all came out anyway, with all the harsh air she had been holding back. âHow the hell did you reason out telling her all that?â
Jordan looked up at her, not at all startled by her outburst. âSheâs not going to the media. Sheâs with UT, and Biodiversity could be a big help.â
Jillianâs mouth hung slack for a moment before she put it in gear again. âShe had no ID on her. You didnât even call UT to see if someone by that name works there!â
âSheâs trustworthy.â Jordan remained calm.
Which just served to send Jillian rocketing to the other end of the spectrum.
âTrustworthy!? How would you know? You just met her!â
He clenched his teeth then slung it right back at her. âWould you accept an argument from a blind man about the color of the sky?â
âUh!â She knew she looked and sounded stupid standing there with her mouth open again. And she couldnât shut it off. The offended part of her brain stepped in to fill the void. âBlind!
Well, Iâm so sorry I wasnât born with your handy trust-o-vision, but you donât just blurt out classified material like that.â
She had done it. She knew it. Jordan snapped, and came up out of the chair at lightning speed. He towered over her, his face close enough to fill her field of vision with the anger and hurt in his eyes, with his chestnut brows drawn tight together, with the clench of his jaw. âIf we donât solve this, itâs going to be named after us. And other people will die. What would you have me do, Jillian? Refuse help?â
Her teeth clicked, she brought them together so hard. She turned away out of his space in order to breathe in. And slowly out. It wasnât enough, and she forced herself to do it a second, then a third time.
When she had pulled the pieces of herself together enough she spoke again. But she didnât look at him. âI may not have that intuition you do, but you should still consult me before you decide to spill secrets.â
She felt his sigh even though her back was turned. âThere wasnât enough time.â
This time Jillian squared up and looked him directly in the eyes. âYes, there was. And if you believe there isnât then you need to find the time.â
He took a small concessionary step back as his hand came up to comb his fingers through his already rumpled hair. âYouâre right.â His voice washed over her again a heartbeat later. âIâm sorry.â
Jillian blinked in surprise as she felt all the support leave her, and she sank back onto the tilted mattress, knowing even as she did it that it was a mistake. She spread her knees, planting her feet firmly to brace herself against near-certain humiliation, and sunk her head into her hands.
âWhat if she screws up the investigation?â
She heard the chair scrape up beside her before she felt the heat of his arm around her shoulders. âShe wonât.â
She sniffed, and even as she did it became mortified.
âHey, donât cry. Weâll figure this out.â
With his acknowledgment it became impossible to hide the tears. âHow am I going to figure this out when I canât even remember not to sit on this stupid bed?â
She felt the deep rumble in Jordanâs touch long before she heard the sound of him laughing, and slowly she joined him. Even though her left leg ached from bracing herself upright.
Jillian finally gathered herself, the one concession to her tears a brief wipe with her sleeve. And she pushed herself off the bed and away from him before she faced him unable to hold back a final sniff. âI need ice cream.â
She rambled into the kitchen with Jordan following and pulled the carton out of the fridge, ignoring the roosters staring at her while she did it. She fixed two bowls and sat down, âWe know that it isnât airborne.
The chain of infection just doesnât make sense.â
âIf itâs viral or bacterial it doesnât match with anything known. So it isnât contagious. And that leaves environmental as the best guess.â
She sighed, trying to enjoy the food, and grateful it was created outside the town boundaries.
âBut ⊠weâve checked everything. We have no standard radioactivity. No toxic chemicals. Weâve tested the water, the meat Parsonâs has been getting, the air, the soil. What the hell else do we test?â
âWe do have a magnetic anomaly in part of the town.â His spoon scraped the bottom of the bowl.
âYeah, that magnetic reversal. Itâs weird, but ⊠letâs face it, an MRI is about a thousand times stronger than the earthâs field. And thatâs an entirely enclosed magnetic field. And we put people in those every day, some people repeatedly, and aside from it yanking off your jewelry, there are no harmful effects. Certainly not vomiting and coma.â
She let a few bites melt on her tongue, before she started thinking aloud again. âIt makes more sense that itâs immunological. Like AIDS was when they first saw it. It attacks people with weak systems.â
Jordan stood and politely rinsed out the bowl, which she was relatively certain had a pig staring up from the bottom. âBut those people tested positive for everything. Ours test for nothing. Is it the weakened immune system combined with the magnetic field?â
Jillian shook her head and waited while she swallowed down the pat of ice cream she had just fed herself. âImmuno-compromised patients go into MRIs at five times the rate of nonimmuno-compromised patients, without these effects.â
âHow the hell do you know that?â He put his hands up. âThose cancer patients are often nauseated anyway, maybe the MRI compounds it and we just donât see it.â
She shook her head in time to the thoughts churning inside. âItâs chemo that makes the patients nauseated, and thereâre tons of immuno-compromised patients that donât have chemo. But even then those patients still donât exhibit ear pain, or coma and death. And if that is our culprit, those people ought to be going down fast and furious because they have far weaker systems than Mr. Parson did⊠Whatâs actually more than likely is that the magnetic reversal mucked up the machinery or assays and we have something standard but our results
Comments (0)