“So what happens to us?” Alyssa asked, her voice low.

“You’ll be transferred to Camp Aledo in Illinois tomorrow. I recommend you keep your heads down. If you continue to make trouble, things will not go well for you there.”

“Better that than where I was,” Alyssa whispered.

“Why not just let us go?” I asked. “Then we’d be out of your hair completely.”

“My orders don’t allow for that.” Colonel Levitov strode past us, toward the exit.

“And the DWBs?” I yelled after him. “The ones who actually did the killing and kidnapping? What happens to them?”

“Not my concern,” Levitov yelled back. “I’ve got bandit gangs coming out my ass. It’s all I can do to hold off the Peckerwoods’ raids.” He left the tent.

I slumped. I was further than ever from finding Darla. Tomorrow I’d get shipped to some other godforsaken camp. Something was in my eyes, making them water, but I couldn’t rub them with my hands cuffed behind my back.

Ben’s voice cut through my morose thoughts. He yelled after Levitov, “I know how you can get rid of the Peckerwoods completely.”

Chapter 71

Levitov reappeared in the doorway to the maintenance tent. “How? You’ve got thirty seconds.”

Ben replied, “They’re based in Anamosa-”

“I know that.” Levitov sounded annoyed. I cranked my head around, straining to see him standing behind me.

Ben didn’t pick up on it, just kept right on talking. “The Sister Unit and I were at the old prison.”

“It’s a limestone fortress.”

“It is vulnerable because it is set up like a prison,” Ben said. “The electronic systems are all offline, but the manual emergency lockdowns should still work. There are fewer than 150 of the original prisoners still there. The rest have left or been killed. A small force, attacking at the right time, could take control of the manual lockdowns. Then you could lock the Peckerwoods out of their own armory and split up the forces that bunk in each wing. Once they’re isolated, you can clear the area via force or leave them there to starve.”

“Not the most humane plan,” Mom murmured.

Alyssa glared at Mom. “Not half as bad as they deserve!”

Colonel Levitov strode back into the tent and crouched in front of Ben, who was staring at his own shoes. “Do you know how to operate the emergency lockdowns? You know where they are? Can you draw us a map?”

“Yes, I can map most of the prison. I did not see it all.”

“Cut him loose,” Levitov ordered.

“Um, Ben?” Alyssa said.

“Cut the Sister Unit free, too,” Ben said.

“Ben!” Alyssa whispered. “All of them.”

“Yes,” Ben said, “Ben will help you if you let all of Ben’s friends go free.”

“That’s almost as good as transferring us to another camp,” I said. “You can report that we escaped.”

“I’m not allowing any of you to go anywhere until I’ve verified the intelligence you’re supplying.”

I had to go on the raid. Darla was in Anamosa. Or she had been a few days ago when Alyssa last saw her. “Fine. Take us all when you attack the Peckerwoods. That way if anything comes up, Ben’ll be handy. When you’re done kicking the Peckerwoods’ butts, you let us go.”

“Five noncombatants in the middle of a firefight? Forget it.”

“Ben can’t go by himself,” Alyssa said.

“I could, in fact, go by myself, Sister Unit.”

“Take us all. You can leave us outside or locked in a truck or something while you fight. We won’t be in the way.”

Colonel Levitov nodded slowly. “Deal. Captain Billson!” he yelled. “Escort these five to the infirmary. Put them in the empty bunks with a twenty-four-hour guard, three-man detail.”

One of the camo-clad guards yelled “Sir!” as Colonel Levitov pivoted and disappeared. They cut the cuffs off our wrists and marched us into the abandoned WalMart. It was subdivided into hallways and rooms with canvas walls. After a couple of twists and turns, we arrived at a small room into which a dozen cots had been packed.

It was easily the most luxurious sleeping arrangement I’d seen since I left Worthington. One of the grunts even brought us two pails of water-one to wash up in and one to drink from. We huddled together and talked over what we’d learned from Colonel Levitov, trying to keep our voices low enough that the three guards just outside the doorway couldn’t hear us.

We were stuck. We had to help Colonel Levitov no matter how much we distrusted him and hope he kept his promise to release us. Then maybe we could find Darla and hightail it back to Warren.

“I promised to let you take the truck so you could drive to Worthington,” I said to Alyssa.

“Well, I. . do you think your Uncle Paul would take in a couple more people?” she asked.

“I think he’d be glad of the extra help,” I said.

“I don’t know,” Dad said. “They were running awfully low on food when your mom and I left.”

“Things got better. We were doing okay when Darla and I left,” I said. “And Alyssa and Ben would pull their weight.”

“Yeah,” Alyssa said, “I’d like to go to Warren with you. . if that’s okay.” Her voice dropped to a whisper and she leaned closer to me. “You’re the only decent guy I know in this shitball world.”

“Alyssa, I’m not-”

She blushed. “I know you’re not interested in me that way. But we’re friends, right? I’d rather stay close to you. I don’t know why, okay?”

“Okay.” Alyssa had seemed different-less confident-since that morning in the tent. But I’d be glad to have both her and Ben around. I put my hand over hers and squeezed.

Mom and Dad were looking at me. “What?” I said as I released Alyssa’s hand.

“Nothing.” Mom shook her head.

“I’m going to try to get some sleep,” I said.

I picked out a cot at random, lay down on my side, and rested my head on my forearm. We had missed dinner-my stomach was gnawing on a hard knot of nothing. I was exhausted and weak, but sleep refused to come.

My thoughts spun, revolving through the same worry over and over: Darla. I knew she was alive. She had to be. I’d know it if she were dead, right? Or was that total crap made up by movie writers and believed by overly optimistic morons like me? Was she still in Anamosa? When Black Lake attacked the prison, how could I be sure she wouldn’t be hurt?

Amid all these worries, a tiny but fierce flame burned: hope. Tomorrow I might find Darla. Finally.

Chapter 72

It didn’t happen. The next day we were trapped in the infirmary. Black Lake employees came and went all day, setting up kerosene lanterns, bringing paper and pencils to Ben, and quizzing all of us about Anamosa and the Peckerwoods. They even brought food-some kind of wheat porridge-and more water.

Mostly they talked to Ben. I saw Colonel Levitov twice, but he didn’t acknowledge anyone but Ben. We bugged our guards, but no one would give us any information. We passed a frustrating day of enforced rest and nervous chatter.

That night, I was startled out of a troubled sleep by the light from a lantern. A Black Lake guard barked, “Get

Вы читаете Ashen Winter
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату