The Long Dark B.J. Farmer (top 10 books of all time txt) đ
- Author: B.J. Farmer
Book online «The Long Dark B.J. Farmer (top 10 books of all time txt) đ». Author B.J. Farmer
It wasnât all bad. Averyâs mom ended up fighting her way out of her addiction and depression. Averyâs struggles continued, but his ticks lessened, especially after his mom got better. He poured his energy into school and finished valedictorian.
I had taken four years of vocational school. Because of that, I was able to graduate early. I didnât wait around, either. I got the hell out of Indiana as soon as I could, but I stayed in contact with both Avery and his mom. When I heard about his successes, I just figured heâd go on and do his thing, probably end up being a tech CEO, and Iâd rarely if ever see him again.
Then his mom called. She said he wasnât doing well at all; that he freaked out about having to make a speech at his graduation commencement. Worse heâd outright refused, saying heâd rather not graduate than speak. Luckily, the salutatorian stood in for him, or he wouldâve been a high school dropout.
That was the only beginning of his post-high school issues. He refused to take any of the scholarships heâd been offered. His mom said all heâd do was sleep all day, and he seldom came out of his room. When he did, it was to grab some food or use the bathroom, and then it was right back to his room.
I was working construction at the time, and I had neither the time nor money to travel back to Indiana. Instead, I offered to put him to work doing something while he came to grips with his journey into adulthood. She agreed, and he was on a plane and in Texas three days later.
Miley knew a guy who owned a small networking and custom computer shop. He talked to the guy, and Avery started working for him two days later. He worked his way up from sweeping the floors to building custom computers before finally working on the networking and programming side of the business. When I got the drilling superintendent job, I put him to work doing the geeky electronic stuff. He was happy as hell, and so was I.
âI didnât know any of âat. Itâs big of you takin care of âim.â
I turned around to make sure Avery was still sleeping. âAvery is my brother. I owed him and his family a lot⊠making my life bearable like they did.â
Sam nodded. âYou mustâve had it rough, son.â
âPreparation for this, I guess,â I said, trying to smile.
Sam leaned his head against the headrest and looked out the window for several minutes before speaking again. âWhat I said âbout Avery was wrong. âAtâs on me.â
The beeping of the cell phone meant Avery was awake. It was past time for Sam and me to shut down the conversation. Avery detested being talked about, which if you knew his past, youâd understand why. As guilty about airing all of Averyâs dirty laundry as I was, I needed to make Sam understand where Avery was coming from and where heâd been. Avery was different, but he wasnât a pervert â or worse.
Some people have argued over the years that I was overly protective of Avery. They said I was part of the reason he never really grew up â that at forty-six, he acted like a fifteen-year-old. Part of that was right. Part of it, though, was he needed someone to make sure he was alright. Was I overly protective? Yeah, but I couldnât sit back and let people crap on him, including Sam.
Luckily for us, Averyâs sole interest at that moment was the phone. He angrily mumbled something as he thumbed through the Korean language book we got from the library. His frustration stemmed from his inability to read the longer messages to and from Donald (the leader we killed at the Radar installation) and who we guessed was Donaldâs boss.
That didnât mean he didnât learn anything new, because he had, but what we learned made very little sense.
Donald received messages after we killed him, and they werenât kind. The person sending them accused him of being a traitor. Not only were the messages sent to Donald, but they were also sent to the same person Donald had been communicating with up the chain of command. So whoever was sending the messages wanted it known far and wide that he was a traitor.
The Korean word bimil was used in a context Avery didnât understand. It means secret in English, but the way Avery was reading it, the message said, âThe secret is involved,â which doesnât make any sense. So whoever was calling out Donald, was also saying someone or something else was involved with what was going bad in Barrow.
Another part of what was sent up the command was that Donald had killed and buried the Grays. That in of itself was traitorous enough from what we had found out about the Order to justify something happening to Donald.
Then there was the fact that Donald seemed to be Russian, which made the least sense of what we had found out by that point.
âWhat if that⊠that damn Korean wordâŠâ
âBimil,â Avery said.
âWhat if âey was talkin âbout âem Russians we killed?â
âThey wouldnât need to send that message, because they would know a Russian was involved. After all, he was the leader in Barrow,â Avery said in a scolding tone.
âWell, smartass, who âen?â
âI cannot say.â
âNone of us can,â I said, trying to keep the peace. âYou canât make sense of something that doesnât make sense.â
Avery mumbled. âThat goes without saying.â
What I was trying to say was, none of it made any sense. There were all these different disparate parts. There was Russian involvement. We knew or was pretty sure, they provided the EMP weapon, assuming thatâs what it was. I know what I heard back at the radar base. They were speaking Russian. Given the nationalistic bent of the Order, it was hard for me to square them being part of the leadership. Technical and otherwise,
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