quicksilver cheetahs, frozen in midstretch. Cashile climbed over them like a hyperactive cub.
“Fully charged and ready to go,” he said with a grin.
“We’ll leave one minute apart,” said Gemma, doing a credible impersonation of someone able to stand on her own.
“I get my own bike, right?” broke in the kid.
“But you still ride out with your mom. No radio contact unless it’s an emergency. They’ll be hunting us. You can count on that.”
31
THE FRONT DOORS opened, and the ATAC trundled inside, looking like a low-backed, eyeless lizard with eight lumpy wheels for legs. Its chameleon skin shifted and changed as it entered its new environment, taking on the appearance of straight lines and flat surfaces with remarkable effectiveness. When it stopped moving, it very nearly vanished.
“Ammo over there,” said Ray, pointing Clair in the direction of a chest near the ATAC.
Then he mounted his electrobike and throttled it into motion. Without a word, he steered it to the front doors and disappeared into the night. Motor noise rose and fell at his command, and then all was silent again.
Clair opened the ammo chest and stared blankly at a sea of casings and magazines. How would she know what fit her empty pistol? Did she even want to reload it? Hadn’t enough people died that night?
A strong tap on her shoulder alerted her to the presence of the dreadlocked woman at her side. Cashile’s mom wrote her name with a fingertip in the dust on the top of the chest: THEO. Theo held out her palm for the pistol. Clair gave it to her and watched as she expertly handled it. Sections opened, closed, came off, and went back on like some kind of magic show. Then Theo turned back to the chest. She produced a box of bullets and loaded the magazine. It held fourteen tapered copper-sided shells that seemed enormous to Clair’s eyes.
Theo also filled a second magazine, which she handed over, along with another box of bullets and the gun itself. Clair juggled them all, wondering when she might possibly need so much firepower. Was this her life now?
“Uh, thanks,” she said, feeling like a child.
Theo just nodded.
Clair carried her lethal armfuls to where Jesse was waiting next to one of the electrobikes with a bottle of water in each hand. Wordlessly, without meeting her eyes, he gave her one of the bottles. She put the ammo in her backpack and worked out on her own where to stow it in a baggage compartment. Clair put the loaded pistol back in her pocket, hoping against hope that she would never have to use it again. Part of her still resisted the idea that she was about to go riding anywhere.
“Are you armed, Jesse?” asked Gemma.
“No,” he said.
“You should be.”
“Dad didn’t hold with guns, so I won’t either.”
“Maybe if he had, he’d still be with us.”
Jesse glanced at Clair, and she could see naked confusion in his eyes. What was he telling himself had happened back at the safe house? That Clair had shot his father for breaking a lifetime of not using guns and shooting at her, or that she’d shot an impostor in his father’s body? Either possibility seemed ghastly and unlikely.
She looked away.
The only person who could hold Jesse’s liquid stare was Arabelle. She was on the back of a bike, sitting sidesaddle, her useless legs hanging alarmingly close to the rear wheel. Both she and her driver, who had also been the driver of the ATAC, were wearing black helmets like Ray’s.
“Godspeed, all of us,” Arabelle said, ending the conversation with gentle finality.
She put her arms around her driver’s waist. Together, they followed Ray out of the theater and rode off into the night.
Gemma gave Clair a helmet and brusquely explained how it worked. There was a microphone on the jaw guard and tinny speakers inside, both activated by clicking forward with her chin. Gemma tested one radio channel with her, then another with Jesse. Clair couldn’t hear the second conversation, but they seemed satisfied.
“Need to ask you a question,” she bumped “q” while they were busy.
“Of course, Clair. Ask away.”
“What’s your name?”
“Why?”
“Can’t keep calling you ‘q’ in my head.”
“Why not? It works for me, Clair.”
“Okay.” Clair was too tired for this coy evasiveness. Wannabe spy-kid or not, having a name other than Q wouldn’t change anything, she supposed, since it would almost certainly be false.
“Gotta go.”
Cashile and Theo were just heading off, riding two identical bikes. The kid looked even smaller than usual stretched out across the back of his. He waved at her as he disappeared through the doorway, and Clair waved back.
Then it was just Jesse, Clair, and Gemma, and the clock slowly counting down the next minute.
Gemma was looking pale, but if she considered herself well enough to drive, she was well enough to answer questions.
“You said people affected by Improvement live just seven days,” Clair said. “How do you know?”
“Because that’s the way it works,” Gemma said, fiddling with something on her electrobike. “We’ve seen it before.”
“But how do you know Libby’s definitely affected? She’s been under stress, using drugs—”
“You know that’s not what this is. You saw the files I gave Dylan in the video feed. Libby’s brain has been damaged, altered, changed. Call it what you want, that’s what it boils down to. That’s what Improvement has done to her. She’s not herself. Not anymore.”
Zep had used exactly that phrase.
“I don’t believe you.”
“She’ll commit suicide within a week. It’s inevitable.”
“Libby isn’t going to kill herself. I won’t let her.”
“How are you going to stop it?”
“If Improvement has changed her, I’ll find a way to change her back.”
“How?”
“There must be a way.”
“There doesn’t have to be anything.” Gemma shook her head firmly. “Better get used to the idea. The Libby you know is gone forever. “
“How can you say something like that?”
“Because this is what Improvement
Gemma was still bent over the bike, not looking at either Clair or Jesse, keeping her face carefully averted from them. Something splashed onto the smooth skin of the bike, and Clair was shocked to realize that it was a tear. Gemma was crying. She didn’t blink or gulp or even seem to notice it herself, but Jesse was staring at her with his water bottle raised halfway to his mouth.