Unity Elly Bangs (life changing books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Elly Bangs
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I couldnât resist listening, but I didnât believe I would ever understand what sheâd just said.
Naoto took her hand. âCome on. We still need to find a ride out of here.â
The more I studied Danae, the stranger I felt. I should have been paying attention to everyone else but her; should have kept busy identifying firing positions, tracking each face in the crowd in the corner of my eye, staying vigilant for other killers like me. Instead I watched the way she fixated on one relic or anotherâand for fleeting moments, there was something eerily familiar about her.
She stopped suddenly. Her body stiffened. Her gaze focused on the exit, or the street beyond, full of dust and searing light.
âTheyâre here,â she said. âThe Keepers.â
I braced myself. Instinctively I grabbed both of my clients and pulled them down behind the curtain of a vacant stall.
âWhere?â Naoto hissed. âWhere did you see them? Danae? Hello?â
She blinked and looked at us like she didnât understand why we were so tense. Her eyes were dilated, almost freakishly. âI donât mean I actually see them. I mean, the Keepers have a post here. A mission. In Crossroads Station.â
âYou could have mentioned this earlier,â I said.
âWell, Iâm not exactly in my right mind,â she said dismissively. âAm I paranoid? Or am I paranoid that Iâm paranoid? Para-para-paranoia.â She started to lean out of the curtain.
Naoto pulled her back. âDamnit, we have to run!â
âNo,â she said. Her expression abruptly hardened. âFive years now Iâve cowered in fear of them. Hiding in Bloom. Letting fear eat me alive. I need to know, and thereâs only one way to find out. We have an opportunity. We have a man with a gun.â She looked up at me. âI want you to go look. Itâs in the church just down that street. Go . . . do reconnaissance. Thatâs something people like you do, isnât it?â
I started to reject her idea.
A calm came over me. Iâd squandered my first chance to die, back on the train. Now I was being given a second.
âThat seems like a bad idea,â Naoto told her.
âNo,â I interrupted. âItâs smart. You two . . . stay here. If I donât return in five minutes, you should assume Iâm not coming back.â
Naoto gaped at me. Danae nodded.
âWait,â she said. âWhat are you going to do if you find them?â
A nervous pause passed between us.
âReconnaissance,â I said.
Without another word I slid back through the curtain. I cleared my mind, slid my goggles back over my eyes, and walked out into the burning light.
Only a hundred meters ahead, I saw it. The shadow of a cross loomed, ebbing and flowing through waves of smoke and dust as I approached. Now I could make out the front of the building clearly enough to note the ideal sniper positions on the roof, the small windows above the double doors. The entry was a perfect kill zone. I turned off my armor and brandished my wave rifle as visibly as I could, so that anyone in that building would see itâso they wouldnât wait to find out who I was before they opened fire.
For a few steps, I closed my eyes and just breathed. I had a thought that it was good to die on the steps of a church. It wasnât suicide. It wasnât the Majorâs version of cowardice. I was turning myself in for my crimes.
I felt the concrete steps under my feet and stopped.
Nothing moved but the sand on the wind.
I opened my eyes. Through a break in the dust the windows stared down on me, empty as a skullâs sockets.
I went inside and had a look around. The interior was unusually intact: one of those unusually overbuilt or just lucky land structures that had survived multiple storm seasons. What made no sense was that it had clearly been abandoned for years, but there was no trash inside, no bedrolls, no graffiti, no fires. It was the perfect place to take shelter, surrounded by refugees in desperate need, but no one had sheltered here for a long time.
As I was about to leave, I saw something on the floor by the entrance, covered in dust. I lifted it and shook it off, and it fell apart in my hands, but what was left of the black and gold cloth banner still legibly read: WE ARE THE KEEPERS OF THE
They existed. Theyâd been here. Whoever or whatever they were.
I put away my rifle and stepped back outside. A young woman was standing erect in the middle of the street, staring hard at me, her face hidden under her goggles and shemagh.
I waved and shouted over the wind howling through the ruins, âHey, do you know what happened here? ÂżQue pasĂł aquĂ? Nani ga okotta?â
She said something then, but the wind carried her voice away.
âWhat did you say?â I yelled.
She repeated herself once and then broke into a run and disappeared amid the dust. All Iâd been able to make out was the word âcursed.â
There was still a shake in my hands when I returned to the market. I composed myself as well as I could and told my clients what Iâd found. Danae knitted her brow and bit nervously at her knuckles.
âThatâs all wrong,â she said. âNo. That canât be right. They wouldnât leave. They knew I was in Bloom. They made me their mission. They said I was an abomination, and theyâd hunt me to the edges of the Earth.â
Naoto held her, and she clung to him. Her fingers dug in to his arms hard enough to bruise.
âWe know someone is hunting you,â I said. âWhether itâs these âKeepersâ or another entity, our objective is the same. We need to get to the truck depot and try to negotiate transport to Phoenix.â
âYes,â Naoto said. âPlease. Letâs just keep moving.â
âYeah,â she saidâbut we only made it a few steps farther toward the depot before she stopped.
She was staring in delight at
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