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
The townspeople put gas in their cars and drove through the McDonalds. The Home Depot lot was empty, and Jordan hazarded a guess that food and gas ranked higher than repairs. Maybe this town full of scientists was smart enough to realize that barricading their doors would only trap them inside and keep nothing out.
âShit!â Davidâs voice cut through the air.
âWhat?â Jillian turned to him, and from her color, just that quick motion was enough to make her green. Or maybe it was the same thought that Jordan was having. David swore all the time, but not in a surprised way, and if something here had surprised him it would have to be bad. Really bad.
âWeâre either on the fuzzy edge of a very large reversal and weâre going to hit it any second, or weâve been riding the edge since three lights back.â
âBut the road is straight. Itâs not following an arc at all.â Jordan didnât understand any of the magnetics of it, he knew just enough to pass the physics section of the MCAT years ago when he went into med school.
Beyond that he was a slave to what David chose to share with him. But he knew that what they had been finding was that the bubbles were circular. Probably how they had gotten dubbed that way in the first place.
âExactly, Sherlock.â
Jordan almost popped him upside the head, which would have been really easy to from the back seat. Instead, he fought the urge while David began explaining, âWhich makes me think itâs a really big bubble⊠. shit.â
Jordan didnât put voice to it. David would tell him or not and there wasnât much he could do about it. Jillian however seemed to believe she could hold some sort of sway over David. Jordanâs first thought was that she was lying to herself. Then he realized there was every good chance it was him lying to himself. She might very well hold sway with David. Who knew what had been going on between them while he was in Lake James watching his family slip away one by one?
He tamped down the images, thinking that the news David had preceded with shhiiiiiiit was going to be happier thoughts than the ones he was having.
âWeâre in.â
Jordanâs back snapped straight. âWell then, get out!â
But David kept driving, not noticing Jillian turning green with fear or illness on the seat next to him. Neither option was acceptable to Jordan.
âJillian,â At the sound of his voice she turned to face him and Jordan was unable to read all the emotions running stampede across her features. âFind another path on the map. Take us far left or right ⊠or âŠâ
David set down the black palm-pilot-looking-thing, that was a serious navigational compass as best as Jordan could tell, and picked up the old boy scout version, complete with red needle and N E S W markings. âDavid, which way is out?â
âWeâll just drive straight through.â The blond head never really glanced up from the small hammered silver fob in front of him. He would have caused a serious pile-up if anyone had been on the road. But these people were organized.
âGet out of the bubble.â Jordan didnât realize that he was unbuckled and hanging over the front seat. âYou and Jillian have already been exposed to these for too long.â He didnât add that he was giving less and less of a crap if David fell into a serious coma right this instant. Except that heâd prefer the asshole put the car in âparkâ first.
David said nothing, just kept driving, occasionally glancing up to check the flow of traffic against the whispered directions Jillian was giving him. It seemed he was taking them into the heart of the reversal. The man had no concern for his own safety. Jordan couldnât care less. David had no concern for Jordanâs safety.
That was because he was a son of a bitch. But having no concern for Jillianâs was beyond Jordanâs limits. If heâd had a gun, he would have pulled it and tucked it right at the base of Davidâs head, right up the foramen magnum. The hole there would make certain that a bullet couldnât glance off that thick head. Guaranteed death.
âWeâre fuzzy.â The words came after long minutes waiting for a response. Long minutes of almost leisurely driving down a small town turnpike with the sun overhead and greenery that made both the Nevada desert and Lake James look like they were constructed from brown bags.
Jillian started to take deeper breaths and with shaky motions pointed out the cross street they were looking for, then the white tents gently breathing with the breeze. It was a high school soccer field from the looks of the sign posted just under the snarling wildcat. In running red light letters it read âno school until further noticeâ.
David made a hard right into the lot and stopped the car at the edge. With a quick look at his compass he shoved it into his pocket and pulled the black high-tech contraption from his briefcase and started to unfold himself from the car.
Jordan threw himself out the backseat and hustled up to one of the suits who was approaching with a manila envelope. With the way the past three days had been going, if he was lucky, it would be full of anthrax and he could inhale deeply and die a slow and painful death. Which would, of course, be far more humane than what he was suffering now.
What he was suffering was only compounded by David walking around the front of the car and offering Jillian his arm, âBaby, are you okay?â
Thoughts warred in Jordanâs brain. Now he asks how sheâs doing? And Baby?
But the man was saying the envelope was from Landerly. And Jordan saw his own hands in front of him, only now aware that he was shaking far worse than he could detect through his own senses, even now that he knew he was doing it.
The pages came out neat and crisp, far better looking than anything they had pulled off the little traveling fax machine. He scanned the notes taking in the news. The churnings of Landerlyâs brain, gathered into understandable English by some tech or junior MD now that he and Jillian werenât there to do the job.
âDavid!â He yelled but didnât look up. Didnât want to see what was going on, didnât care.
âLanderly says the magnetics of the reversals are getting stronger in the centers. Thereâs a graph here, almost like regular concentric rings.â
David approached and snapped the pages from his hands. It wasnât even an asshole move, just the unthoughtfulness of a man who had always gotten what he wanted. But Jordan continued.
âThe Nevada site maps like a target. But itâs even stronger than here or McCann. Landerly thinks thatâs why it took everyone out. McCannâs getting stronger, too.â
Jillian peeked over Davidâs shoulder. âThat doesnât make sense. The wildlife is returning to normal. Becky Sorenson said the frogs were looking more normal as were the insects and the other animals she tagged.â Her brows knit together in frustration and there was almost a chugging sound as her brain ratcheted up a notch.
Jordan shrugged, simply grateful that the churning of her mental gears was a good indicator that she hadnât suffered permanently from David driving them straight through the last reversal. He felt his temper abate, even if the anger didnât.
Still David frowned, flipping one page and then the next. He rotated the papers and Jordan almost chuckled at the sight. As though this whole stinking pile of crap would look better upside down. But he didnât laugh. He couldnât fault the geologist for trying.
It wasnât like he had any better ideas.
Chapter 14Jillian sat on the edge of the cold cot. It was green army issue fabric slung and stitched to a metal frame, and it had either seen better days or had recently been the recipient of a very large occupant. It hadnât held her heat, and she hadnât been smart enough to line the bed with the blanket before she lay down, so she had lost temperature while she slept.
And slept fitfully at that. There was no way to get Jordan onto that thing with her without it looking like something more and she wasnât anywhere near brave enough to climb into a bed with David, not that either man would really fit on a cot with her. And she certainly wasnât stupid enough to climb into any bed with David when what she wanted was sleep.
Jordan was still out cold, his arm hanging peacefully out from under the covers he had partially kicked off.
His fingers were mere inches from the ground but they didnât seem to notice. His face was soft in sleep; clearly he wasnât having her problems. The only thing that betrayed his state was the dark circles under his eyes and the two day growth of beard that aged him considerably, making him look more like the man he was and not just the friend she considered him.
With a sigh, she just gave up, sinking bare toes into the rough dark carpet of the classroom they were staying in. Desks had been pushed back and stacked against the walls. The whiteboard left clean for the scientists to use. They hadnât. She felt like all the churning in her stomach had prevented all the churning in her skull from producing a single useful thought for quite a while now.
Her head felt like it was swaying at the top of a tall post, and so she nixed her original idea of wandering down to find the cafeteria. The CDC was supposed to have set up their own food supply there, but she was too shaky to go it alone.
Jillian turned back to the bed; if she was already out of it then at least she was going to do this right this time. She deluded herself into thinking that maybe if she could retain her body heat she could sleep. With her mind focused on that singular thought, she rearranged the blanket and crawled back in. Pulling the free half of the blanket tightly across her, she squeezed her eyes shut and tried to fight the bright gray light streaming through the fairly useless blinds.
She relaxed her entire body, muscle by muscle. When she was a resident, sheâd been able to pass out at the drop of a hat, anywhere, anytime. But now sleep eluded her in the most painful of ways.
After a while she gave up, thankful that she was at least starting to get warm, and opened her eyes.
Jordan was watching her. âMorning.â
âItâs not morning.â Her voice creaked like old hinges. âMorning implies that there was a night. I donât recall one.â
âStill not sleeping?â
âWhat do you think?â She regretted it as soon as the words left her mouth.
But she sank into a solid portion of shame when Jordan asked her if she wanted to join him. Completely spoken with sympathy and none of the venom she had thrown at him.
âThat canât be comfortable.â
âWhat will you care? Youâll be asleep.â
Jillian almost laughed, and almost wondered
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