When?
Helen Simms’s mental voice was that of a small, frightened child.
It has to be soon,
because I can’t take much more of this.
“None of us can,” George said. “Besides, right now that bitch—”
Kalisha gave her head a warning shake, and George continued mentally. He wasn’t very good
at it, at least not yet, but Kalisha got the gist. They all did. Right now that bitch Mrs. Sigsby
would be concentrating on Luke. Stackhouse, too. Everyone in the Institute would be, because
they all knew he’d escaped. This was their chance, while everyone was scared and distracted.
They would never get another one so good.
Nicky began to smile.
No time like the present.
“How?” Iris asked. “How can we do it?”
Avery:
I think I know, but we need Hal and Donna and Len.
“Are you sure?” Kalisha asked, then added,
They’re almost gone.
“I’ll get them,” Nicky said. He got up. He was smiling.
The Avester’s right. Every little bit
helps.
His mental voice was stronger, Kalisha realized. Was that on the sending or receiving end?
Both
, Avery said. He was smiling, too.
Because now we’re doing it for ourselves.
Yes, Kalisha thought. Because they were doing it for themselves. They didn’t have to be a
bunch of dazed dummies sitting on the ventriloquist’s knee.
It was so simple, but it was a
revelation: what you did for yourself was what gave you the power.
14
Around the time Avery—dripping wet and shivering—was being
pushed through the access
tunnel between Front Half and Back Half, the Institute’s Challenger aircraft (940NF on the tail
and MAINE PAPER INDUSTRIES on the fuselage) was lifting off from Erie, Pennsylvania,
now with its full assault team on board. As the plane reached cruising altitude and set out for
the small town of Alcolu, Tim Jamieson and Wendy Gullickson were escorting Luke Ellis into
the Fairlee County Sheriff’s Department.
Many wheels moving in the same machine.
“This is Luke Ellis,” Tim said. “Luke, meet Deputies Faraday and Wicklow.”
“Pleased to meet you,” Luke said, without much enthusiasm.
Bill Wicklow was studying Luke’s bruised face and bandaged ear. “How’s
the other guy
look?”
“It’s a long story,” Wendy said before Luke could reply. “Where’s Sheriff John?”
“In Dunning,” Bill said. “His mother’s in the old folks’ home there. She’s got the . . . you
know.” He tapped one temple. “Said he’d be back around five, unless she was having a good
day. Then he might stay and eat dinner with her.” He looked at Luke, a beat-up boy in dirty
clothes who might as well have been wearing a sign reading RUNAWAY. “Is this an
emergency?”
“A good question,” Tim said. “Tag, did you get that info Wendy requested?”
“I did,” the one named Faraday said. “If you want to step into Sheriff John’s office, I can
give it to you.”
“That won’t be necessary,” Tim said. “I don’t think you’re going to tell me anything Luke
doesn’t already know.”
“You sure?”
Tim glanced at Wendy, who nodded, then at Luke, who shrugged. “Yes.”
“Okay. This boy’s parents,
Herbert and Eileen Ellis, were
murdered in their home about
seven weeks ago. Shot to death in their bedroom.”
Luke felt as if he were having an out-of-body experience. The dots didn’t come back, but
this was the way he felt when they did. He took two steps to the swivel chair in front of the
dispatch desk and collapsed onto it. It rolled backward and would have tipped him over if it
hadn’t banged into the wall first.
“Okay, Luke?” Wendy asked.
“No. Yes. As much as I can be. The assholes in the Institute—Dr. Hendricks and Mrs.
Sigsby and the caretakers—told me they were okay, just fine, but I knew they were dead even
before I saw it on my computer. I knew it, but it’s still . . . awful.”
“You had a
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