“The dupes were expecting this other woman. They called her . . .” It was on the tip of her tongue. “
“All right,” he said, cautiously. “We’ll trade your friend for one of theirs. Then we use the ax.”
“On her?” asked Jesse.
“On the machines, of course. We’ll worry about the rest when we have her.”
54
TWO FARMERS LIFTED Libby’s body and carried her through the Farmhouse. Clair stayed close, still holding Q’s hand. Q’s grip was getting limper by the moment. Her eyes were now completely closed. When they reached the booth—a big industrial machine shaped like a water tank with a curved, sliding door—they laid her on the floor inside and stepped back.
“Are you okay from here?” Clair asked, the last to leave.
Q’s head nodded fitfully. “It h-hurts, Clair. I j-just want it to s-stop.”
“Is there anything I can do?”
Q shook her head.
Clair lingered a second longer, still troubled by this broken vision of Libby’s body. Then she let Q go. The door slid shut behind her. The machine hummed and hissed, cycling matter and data in furious streams. It seemed an age since Clair had last been near a booth, let alone standing inside one.
“The dupes Improved Arabelle,” she said to the others, “and Theo, too. The dupes fixed the errors in their patterns before bringing them back. Gemma said that Improvement is like duping . . . and now we know it’s the other way around, too.”
“Is that how you knew they were dupes?” asked Jesse.
“That and the guns they pulled on me.”
Gemma was pale and staring at Clair in horror. Her fists were clenched.
“They won’t get a second chance,” said Arcady. “Not here. That I promise you.”
The booth chimed and the door began to slide open. Farmers and members of WHOLE alike raised their weapons. Clair stepped closer. Finally, she had a real shot at finding out who was behind all this. She tried to stand tall in her one-sleeved shirt and willed herself not to flinch, no matter what she saw.
Inside the booth stood a lone girl dressed all in black. It was as though d-mat had rolled back time. Libby’s body was uninjured and showed no signs of trauma. There was no sign of the birthmark, either.
“Hello . . . Mallory,” said Clair. The name felt strange on her tongue, directed at someone who looked
The woman tensed, but the pistol at her side stayed where it was. Her head tilted slightly to the right.
“So you know my name,” she said. “Don’t think that makes you special. It won’t change anything.”
The woman spoke with a voice that was neither Libby’s nor Q’s. The inflection was harder, more controlled. Confident, even when she was staring down a dozen angry men and women.
“Tell us about Improvement,” Clair said. “Tell us about the dupes.”
“Or else?”
Mallory raised the pistol and placed the barrel under her own throat. Before Clair could move, Mallory pulled the trigger and folded to the floor like a puppet whose strings had been cut.
Arcady rushed into the booth, calling for a medical kit. Clair stared in shock. It was too late to do anything. She had more blood on her face and hands—Libby’s blood, this time, and the face of her best friend was ruined in her memory forever. No amount of effort was going to get Mallory to tell them her secrets now.
Jesse turned away, looking as though someone had punched him in the stomach.
Clair wondered why she didn’t feel more shocked. Mallory had been a living being, a person as vital as any other. Even if she was a dupe in a stolen body, even if other versions of her could be created a thousand times over, identical to the version that had been standing in front of Clair just moments ago,
Yet Clair felt calm and focused. Clarified, like she had crossed some kind of emotional threshold—or
Or else it would hit her later, when she could afford to let her guard down.
“Are you going to be okay?” she asked Jesse, putting a hand on his shoulder.
He nodded once, a bit too quickly, like he might be about to throw up.
“Secure the body,” said Arcady, giving up any thought of resuscitation. “It’s time to make plans.”
55
THE COUNCIL OF war took place in the Farmhouse’s main hall.
“We’ll leave immediately,” said Turner. “We’re putting you all at risk.”
“I think that’s for the best,” said Arcady without hesitation. “We’ll help you as much as we can, but this isn’t our fight.”
“They murdered your people too,” said Jesse.
“They died defending our turf. That’s what we do. If the dupes come back, we’ll be ready.”
Clair imagined an army composed of infinitely replaceable, Improved dupes and said nothing. What could she say? Hunkering down wouldn’t solve anything. Libby, the
Clair wasn’t going to give up on Libby, no matter what Libby had told her to do. Clair was going to
“What is your intention?” Arcady asked them. “Where are you planning to go?”
No one spoke for a long moment. Clair was waiting to see what Turner would say. Presumably WHOLE had other hideouts like the Skylifter, where they could slowly rebuild their numbers. It couldn’t be easy assembling any kind of operational core when Abstainers were scattered all over the world, steadfastly refusing to make use of the main means of getting around.
“I still like Clair’s plan,” said Jesse. “Take it up with VIA. It’s their problem, ultimately. They’ll have to fix it.”
“You’d be exposed all the way,” said Arcady. “Who knows what would be waiting for you in New York?”
“And VIA is toothless,” said Ray. “The watchdog hasn’t even barked in years.”
“You obviously haven’t smuggled any illicit molecules recently,” said one of the farmers. “Or tried to sell a bootleg Mona Lisa.”
“And we have evidence,” said Jesse, glancing at the rows of bodies.
“If the dupes try to attack us,” Clair said, “we could end up with several of the same body, which would really clinch it.”
“But we couldn’t take them all with us,” said Ray.
“I know,” she said. “We’d just take Libby.”
Libby was where it had all started. It would end with her, Clair swore.
“You don’t really think VIA’s going to let us walk up to the front door with a corpse over our shoulders and stroll right in?” Ray held his hands above his head as though someone had stuck a gun in his back. “There’ll be security sweeps, background checks, the works. Look at us. If you were VIA, would you let any of us in?”
Clair did look. They were still in pajamas and shirts, except for Gemma, who must have slept in her clothes. They were splattered with blood and stained with pasts no ordinary citizen would boast of. Ray was right. They