The Lofties (The Echelon Book 2) Ramona Finn (fiction novels to read .txt) đ
- Author: Ramona Finn
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âHe was good to me,â he said. âWe were enemiesâthey made us enemiesâbut he was always decent. Heâd come keep me companyââ
I felt, more than heard, Lockâs breath catch. He swallowed audibly and kept going, dry throat scraping.
âItâs not me who should be saying this. He had folks waitingâstill does, maybe. He was a husband, a father. A friend. I knew him a few weeks, enough to know that, but I donât have those stories, the ones youâre supposed to tell. Good-time stories, âremember when.â I donâtâI donâtââ
âItâs okay.â I fumbled for his hand and found his wrist instead. I grabbed on awkwardly and gave it a squeeze. âHe, uh... He stole your buggy that first night, then got mad when you got sick in it.â
Lock snorted wetly. âI didnât even throw up.â
âI think he still had fun, though. Lita never let him drive.â
âI remember that,â said Lock. âHe told me, in the pit. Said his kid was the same, always taking charge. He was learning to read, and heâd take over story time, grab the book and just go for it, like...â He leaned down and touched Derrickâs face. âWeâll find your folks, if theyâre out there. Let them know where you are. Give âem some peace, maybe.â
Derrick lay staring, resplendent in Lockâs coat. It was big on him, soft and heavy. His hands lay cold on his chest, lined brown with dirt. It didnât seem fair, gold at his wrists and the desert under his nailsâsuch a fine garment, come too late to warm him. Too late to comfort him after all his hard scrabble. I turned my face to Lockâs chest and tried to remember how to breathe.
âIâm sorry,â said Lock, whether to me or to Derrick, I couldnât be sure. He wrapped his arms around me and we stood in the cold, stood till our lantern guttered and our shadows danced on the walls.
âWe should go,â I said. âItâs scary down here in the dark.â
Lock nodded, and we left Derrick to his rest. We trudged back to the elevator and sweated our way to the top. I didnât think weâd speak again, not in this dead place, but Lock stopped me in the main hall, his hand on my arm.
âI think theyâre alive,â he said.
âWho, Lita andââ
âMost of them.â He gestured back the way weâd come. âLazrad didnât do that, back at the mine. At least, I donât think she did. I think they did it themselves, to block her from the rigur.â
I frowned. I had no room for hope, no room to see it shattered. âWhat makes you say that?â
âLook around. Thereâs nothing here.â He nodded at the fissure, at the thin light from outside. âThey took the projectors. Decemites wouldnât do that. And over there, where the village was, Iâm not seeing dead sheep. Someone took those, and no way it was anyone from Echelon.â
I stood chewing that over. It made sense, on the face of it. What would Lazrad want with sheep, or a mine blown to rubble?
âWe should look for a radio,â I said. âIf theyâre out there, we need to find them, tell them what we found. They need to know thereâs more Domes. Ones that might sell them gretha.â
âYeah.â Lock perked up slightly. âWhereâs that one you used, with the fancy name?â
âWhat, the Carillon?â I chuckled. âIf youâre right, and they did get out, Jasper definitely took that with him. But his lab was full of old junk. Could be worth checking there.â
We refueled our lantern from one we found on the wall and made our way to the lab. I breathed a sigh of relief, finding the Carillon gone. Jasperâs computer was also gone, and most of his books. Heâd left his flasks and his bottles, and they lay shattered on the floor. Lock glanced at my bare feet and waved me back from the mess. I watched as he dug through the wreckage, upending boxes and shaking out drawers.
âThis was a radio once.â He held up a bundle of wires that were knotted up at one end and hooked to a plastic shell. âNow, if I could just find the rest of it...â
I picked my way past the glass and crouched down beside him, raking through chips and batteries, old keypads, broken tools. âWhy would anyone keep all this?â
âHereâs why.â Lock plucked a melted something, trailing a speaker from one end. His grin seemed almost genuine, barely frayed at the seams. âThis should do. Letâs get it outside, and weâll see whoâs listening.â
I tried not to get my hopes up as we sat in the sun, Lock tinkering with his radio while I kept watch. Still, my pulse picked up at the first burst of static. Lock connected the dial, and I found myself holding my breath. A burst of music came through, and we grabbed hands and cheered.
âSomeoneâs alive out there. Theyâreââ
âWe canât talk on this channel. We still need toââ
âItâs working. You got it working.â I grabbed him and hugged him, breathing his warm scent. Lock laughed and hugged back, rocking me in his arms.
âLemme just scan the dial. We can celebrate once weâve found âem.â
I nodded and stepped back, sniffling in spite of myself. Lock knelt in the dirt and ran up the frequency. The speaker sparked with static into the shortwave bands. I rubbed at my temples, reminded uncomfortably of Lazradâs lab, that strange, buzzing hum. It had filled my whole head, like I was the radio. But what kind of broadcastâ
ââdown the escarpment. Weââ
I yelped. âWas thatâ?â
âFrom the radio.â Lock grabbed the receiver and hit TALK. âHello? This isâthis is, uh, weâre friendly. Can you hear us?â
A faint voice piped up, then a harsh burst of static. Lock jiggled the dial, held the radio over his head. He barked into the speakerâhello? Hello?âbut only white noise came back, hissing over the air.
âItâs okay,â said Lock. âItâs a weak signal, is all. We just need to get close to
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