The Lofties (The Echelon Book 2) Ramona Finn (fiction novels to read .txt) đ
- Author: Ramona Finn
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âWhat are those things?â
âDistractions. False hope.â I turned away as Golden Square flashed by, all lit up and festive in the night.
âThatâs Sky, isnât it?â
âBelay the chatter.â Starkey angled toward the reservoir. I stopped in my tracks, all the warmth fleeing my body. Ben bumped into me and I stumbled, spinning on my heel.
âOna?â
Her voice engulfed us from every direction at once. I looked up and saw her, her face on every screen. She beamed back at me, smiling into the camera, so serene she looked drugged. Elli stood by her, a microphone in one hand, the other on Onaâs shoulder.
âThis isnât cause for panic,â said Ona. âWeâve identified a group of violent exiles living outside the Dome, but their resources are few, and ours are manyâthanks in no small part to the tireless efforts of our Decemites. Thanks are owed, also, to our factory workers, to our maintenance crews, and to everyone in the refinery.â
âPrium.â I spat his name like poison. Ben reached for my arm.
âWhat?â
ââThanks are owedâ? Ona doesnât talk like that. Her lips might be moving, but thatâs Prium talking.â
âThen donât listen to him. Come on. We have to go.â He pulled me away, but Ona was everywhere, her face on every screen.
âMy sisterââ Ona glanced at Elli, her smile fading. âThey corrupted her. Sheâs with them now, sharing our secrets. Hounding us, attacking us, stealing our resources.â She squared her shoulders, eyes blazing. âMylaâs my sister. I donât denounce her lightly. But sheâs a traitor, a scourge. A threat to our way of life.â
My mouth went dry. âNo.â
âAnd sheâs not the only one. We have spies among us, enemies not only of our way of life, but of life itself.â Her voice rose, sharp with fury. âCitizens of the Dirt. Iâm one of you. I served for youâto keep Echelon strong. Now, Iâm calling on you to do the same. If you hear treason, if you hear dissentââ
âIgnore her.â Ben hooked his arm through mine, half-dragging me to the stairs. âItâs like you said. Even I can see thatâs not her.â
âBut that look in her eyesââ
âIâd be pissed too, if someone took me prisoner and made me spout all that crap.â He pulled me along faster, up the stairs, across the catwalk. I went without protest, but my head spun with doubt. Maybe it was Prium, lurking somewhere off-screen with a blaster to her back. But that steel in her voice, that fire in her eyesâI hadnât seen those before, and they chilled me to the bone. Had I hurt her so deeply, lost her for good?
âFor Echelon!â Her voice rose, triumphant. My blood turned to ice at the echo from below, workers raising their tired heads to answer her call.
For Echelon.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
âThis way.â I headed into the sorting station, past the conveyor belt. âWeâll take the ventilation shafts from here.â
Starkey signaled to Ben, and he hopped up on the counter. He took a drill from his pack and unscrewed the vent, and I boosted him into the shaft. Jasper went next, then Starkey and the rest. I brought up the rear, pulling the vent shut behind me and securing it with tape. We wormed our way on, pushing our packs ahead of us. The air got close and the shaft got narrow, and the beat of the Dirt pounded in our ears, its relentless rhythm spurring anxiety.
I heard a thump up ahead, out of time with the rest, then a faint rattling, dwindling to nothing. I hissed a sigh of relief. Iâd been afraid theyâd weld the grate in place and cut us off. That rattling meant they hadnât. It meant Ben had reached the elevator shaft and fixed his rope in place.
âHow many floors is it?â
I blinked. âWhat?â
The man in front of me squirmed, maybe trying to peer back at me. âDown the shaft, to this lab of hers. How many floors?â
âI donât know. Maybe three. Stop talking.â
He did for a moment, then I heard him swallow. âOnly, itâs a long way to fall.â
âSo hold on tight.â I wriggled on as the line moved. I could hear their boots on the wall, Benâs and Starkeyâs, maybe Jasperâs. My breath came loud in the tight space. That static feeling was back, barely a hum for now. I felt it in my teeth, mostly, something like a shiver. My mouth watered with it, metallic spit on my tongue.
âWhat if the elevator comes down?â
âUh?â I bared my teeth in the dark. âI donât knowâget out of the way? If it happens, it happens. Donât dwell.â
âEasy for you to say.â
We inched forward again. I could hear my heart beating, the rush of blood in my ears. Electricity hummed from below. I tried to picture what was down there, mostly to keep my mind off the static. Not thinking about it helped. Weâd be passing the refinery about now, the funnel-shaped cyclone tanks with their faded blue paint; the storeroom was beyond them, tanks piled to the rafters. The guy ahead of me kept muttering, fretting and grousing in the dark. His panic plucked at me, contagious, and I pressed my lips together.
We moved up again, and I felt a draft through my hair. I closed my eyes, smelling motor oil, and my pack hit me in the face.
âWhat the hell?â
âI canât.â A boot drove into my shoulder, and I slid down the vent. I braced myself, snarling, and dug in my heels.
âHey. Hey. Whatâs your name?â
I heard fast, panicked breathing, then a low, pressured grunt. The vent boomed and shuddered, and the boot came again. It pistoned into my pack, and I jerked out of the way.
âHey. Idiot. Whatââ
âLemme outâlemmeââ
I grabbed his foot and held on tight. âWhatâre you trying to do, blow us sky-high? Keep kicking the dynamite, and thatâs whatâs going to happen.â
I heard ragged breathing, then something like a sob.
âLet me out. Please. I canât do this.â
I closed my eyes, fighting frustration. The
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